Fastest growing consumer market

An October 2012 report by McKinsey Quarterly suggests that Africa is the fastest growing consumer market with more upward mobility up the consumer chain than traditionally wealthy markets like Japan.

africa economy

Now I know some of you will at this point, direct me to the fact that Japan is one country and Africa is a sum of countries. But, let story develop. If you look at it from a market perspective, a market can be without boarders and so the comparisons can work. The findings from the continent wide research also found that not all of Africa is experiencing this upward mobility in fortunes it is in the traditionally strong Africa economies like South Africa, Nigeria, Egypt and Morocco. While this is likely dampen any positive feelings about the potential for other African countries, I feel there is new opportunities littered everywhere in Africa for companies selling consumer goods.

The consumer population is growing with the number of people dependent on every working person falling every year meaning more people are earning an income and while they might not have a lot of disposable income, there will need basics and that’s where good market scouting can produce fantastic business opportunities for companies. Manufacturing will probably create the greatest profit margins but imports will probably out strip locally produced consumer products in terms of supply on the market. There is a need to recognise that Africa must add value to more of its produce because we are exporting crude oil and importing petrol and diesel, exporting cotton and importing clothes, exporting cocoa beans and importing chocolates  all which a more expensive than we got paid for the raw materials we exported.

While investment might be an issue when it comes to developing the capabilities to add value to raw materials, I feel the bigger issue is show term thinking amongst businesses in Africa because they a focussed on making a much money as possible it is impossible to go for cumulative approach in developing capabilities. So rather than thinking of building fully fledged manufacturing operations perhaps companies can consider building capacity gradually until they reach desired production level. This process will put less pressure on required investment and allow companies to develop efficient businesses that grow organically over time which is how all developed economies grew because they also developed through expansion in response to growing demand from their home markets.

So the opportunity is there for African economies to grow on the strength of their own demand but competition from foreign companies exporting cheaper product will also grow in response to the grow consumer market, how we overcome that and grow African enterprises will define the future of our economies. It’s my opinion that a long term strategy to growth, prudent profit margins, capacity building will deliver the potential being described by the report

People and their ways!

So we are back from the weekend, everyone around me seems to be finding a little harder to cope with their lives, they are stressed out, tempers being easily tempered with. Why can’t we all just get along?!

Speaking of which, I am not one for celebrity gossip but some people take being a business too far. Celebrities are, essentially, who they are because of who they are but if you take celebrity and make a business out of it then wonder why everyone is in you business, maybe you don’t like who you are because everyone is in your business because of that. We all have pressures but being married for 72 days and then realising that you didn’t like it after all somehow seems to me like it was all a bit of a wind up. Then we come to find out that the wedding pictures were sold for $6.5million it becomes harder to understand the ingenuity of the whole marriage in the first place. People want to know how it is that people can do such kinds of things, 72 days!

Today I was discussing corporate governance with a group of future managers from around the world and it was striking to hear that in the 8 countries that are represented in the group bribes and bribing is considered part and parcel of the business environment in their country. Which led me to ask ” is corruption a common factors amongst all nations?” How do you feel about it? Having been in a society were corruption is not as commonly practiced for the last 11 years, I have come to realise that everything runs smoother when there is transperancy in the access, allocation and use of resources. The ties to my mother land confirms this opinion even more so, we watch people speaking of how Zimbabwe has the best resources per capita ratio in the world but that is only fantasy because the reality that the ratio of resources per capita on the ground is heavily skewed in favour of the rich minority. If only the resources were evenly allocated across the population, only then would the people of Zimbabwe benefit from this glorious statistic that politician use to lace their speeches with.

Corruption is the reasons why the villagers in Marange live in fear because their homes are built on the richest deposit of diamonds the world has discovered in recent times instead of being hopeful that their lives will improve because of those diamonds. Corruption is the reason why there is fuel shortage in Nigeria when the country produces oil for the rest of the world. How is it that only a handful of people hold nations at ransom, have we all bee bribed to accept this mediocre state of affairs or are we too busy paying the bribes for short term gains. Politics!

How about the football?, I told you we would beat chelsea! Now onto the next