Wednesday, November 3, 2010

The other demographic dividend: Emerging markets are teeming with young entrepreneurs

The Economist
October 7, 2010

GLOBALS is one of those fast-growing Indian IT companies that Westerners simultaneously admire and fear. Founded in 2000, it already has offices in 11 countries and customers around the world. The chairman and chief executive, Suhas Gopinath, is just 24 years old. Most of his employees are also in their mid-twenties.

Mr Gopinath is an illustration of a striking business revolution. Emerging-world businesses have traditionally been obsessed with seniority. Ambitious youngsters in countries like India have been equally obsessed with job security. Well-paying jobs, preferably with multinational firms, are the key to success in the marriage market. But this is changing rapidly.

Nandan Nilekani, one of the founders of Infosys, reports that he now comes across mould-breaking young leaders wherever he goes in India. They are even to be found in big companies such as ICICI, a leading bank, Hindustan Unilever, a consumer-goods giant, and Comat Technologies, which provides information to rural Indians. Vivek Wadhwa, an American academic who studies entrepreneurship, says he is inundated with requests for meetings whenever he visits the emerging world. He met 125 fledgling entrepreneurs during a recent trip to New Delhi and will talk to as many as he can manage in Beijing soon.

The rise of young entrepreneurs is extending the meaning of the demographic dividend. Demographers have often noted that most of the emerging world will stay young while the rich world ages. In 2020 the median age in India will be 28, compared with 38 in America, 45 in western Europe and 49 in Japan. But the dividend will be paid not just in the form of more favourable dependency ratios but also in a more entrepreneurial business culture. Young people are innately more inclined to overthrow the existing order than are their elders. This predisposition is being reinforced by two big changes in the emerging world.

The first is the information-technology revolution. The Boston Consulting Group calculates that there are already about 610m internet users in the BRICI countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and Indonesia). BCG predicts that this number will nearly double by 2015. And in one respect many consumers in emerging markets are leapfrogging over their Western peers. They are much more likely to access the internet via mobile devices (which are ubiquitous in the emerging world) rather than PCs. That gives local entrepreneurs an advantage, says Rob Salkowitz, the author of “Young World Rising”. Whereas Western companies are hampered by legacy systems and legacy mindsets, they can build their companies around the coming technology.

The second is a pro-entrepreneurial revolution. Global institutions such as the World Bank and the World Economic Forum have helped to popularise entrepreneurialism. Mr Gopinath was encouraged to stick to his guns as an entrepreneur when the WEF elected him its youngest ever Young Leader. Several big companies have also encouraged the trend. Microsoft is helping local businesses and NGOs improve information-technology infrastructure. Goldman Sachs is spending $100m on female entrepreneurs, many of them in emerging markets.

But even more important than these external nudges are internal changes. The rise of a cohort of highly successful local start-ups such as India’s Infosys, Argentina’s Globant and Ghana’s SOFTtribe has had a dramatic effect on thinking across the region. These companies have demonstrated that young entrepreneurs can succeed mightily: the seven founders of Infosys were in their 20s when they set the company up. They have also created a group of middle-class people who have the wherewithal to bankroll risk: parents who have made money in Infosys or young people who decide to set up on their own after a few fat years in the corporate world.


Great expectations

These young entrepreneurs have already begun to shape some markets such as mobile video games and online karaoke. They have also demonstrated an impressive ability to identify gaps in other markets. Three years ago Bright Simons, a young Ghanaian, came up with an ingenious idea for dealing with the epidemic of counterfeit drugs. He asked drug producers to tag their products with unique bar codes. Consumers can then use their mobile phones to send a copy of the bar code to the producers to make sure the drugs are authentic. Kamal Quadir turned his back on a career on Wall Street in order to found CellBazaar, which provides the 20m subscribers to Bangladesh’s GrameenPhone with a virtual marketplace where they can sell things as humble as sacks of potatoes.

This argument needs to be qualified. China, the emerging world’s most powerful engine, is ageing rapidly, thanks to the one-child policy: by 2020 the average age in China will be 37, almost the same as in America. Young entrepreneurs have plenty of obstacles to mount. In Nigeria the fashion for cyber-crime has all but killed legitimate cyber-business: PayPal will not accept payments from people with a Nigerian internet address. In Latin America many young entrepreneurs operate in an informal economy where innovation is rare and capital hard to come by.

Yet entrepreneurial energies are moving eastward. The fact that many rich-world companies have responded to the economic slump by stopping hiring younger workers will only accelerate the shift. One of the most popular films in America at the moment is “The Social Network”, about a group of young Harvard students who founded one of the world’s fastest-growing companies, Facebook. The next Facebook is increasingly likely to be founded in India or Indonesia rather than middle-aged America or doddery old Europe.

Remittances topple tourism to become Kenya's top forex earner

By ALLAN ODHIAMBO

Posted Wednesday, October 20 2010
Business Daily
The inflow of funds from Kenyans abroad grew significantly in the past 12 months to become the country’s top earner of foreign exchange helped by a renewal of interest in the real estate sector, increasing popularity of university education and growing importance of entrepreneurship as a key source of employment in the country.

A new study by the World Bank and the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) indicates that Kenya received a total of Sh152 billion or $1.9 billion in the past 12 months – beating proceeds from traditional forex earners such as tourism (Sh100 billion), tea (Sh70 billion and horticulture’s Sh71 billion.

This volume of inflow translates to an average of Sh58,800 for each of the 2.61 million Kenyans who received money from abroad during the period and the number of recipients is equivalent to 14 per cent of the country’s adult population.

The study is the first of its kind between the two institutions and the first also to include transfers that are not received through the formal financial system, suggests that the inflow of remittances is three times more than previously thought.

The Central Bank estimate of annual remittances excluding informal channels was $609 million (Sh49 billion) last year, a marginal drop from $611 million in 2008.

This year’s receipts were expected to surpass last year’s owing to the economic recovery of the US economy and stabilisation of the weak European economy -- the major source of the remittance-- which has suffered massive job losses in 2009 following the global economic meltdown that started the third quarter of 2008.

Kenya, like many African countries that receive high volumes of remittances, has been found to be lacking in policies that could help channel the inflows to sectors that strengthen their role in enhancing economic growth – leaving much of it to go into consumption.

The joint survey established that half of the total amount received goes to meeting recipients’ daily expenses such as food, housing and medicare, with the other half going to key economic and social functions including start-up capital for small businesses (35 per cent), paying for university education (33 per cent) and buying or building houses (8 per cent).

Only a tiny four per cent of the remittance receipts are kept as savings.

Unlike the trend in other parts of the world, the World Bank study found that it is Kenya’s emerging middle-class is the main recipient of the remittances.

“This is unique because these are not people looking for money to make ends meet. In other parts of the world it is the needy, who get such remittances,” said Sergio Bendixen, an advisor with the World Bank.

Utilisation of the remittances in growth projects such as housing and business start-ups is being taken as signalling the potential that exists to deploy the funds in enhancement of economic growth.

Mr Michael Fuchs, an advisor to the World Bank’s Africa region on finance and private sector development, said that in many African countries, remittances have moved beyond ordinary support to the subsistence needs of recipients to driving actual GDP growth.

“Governments must develop legal and regulatory frameworks that will help providers of remittances move beyond simple hand-outs. They need to design and deploy innovative and functional financial products and services that facilitate savings, loans, mortgages and insurance,” he said.

While a large fraction of the flows are made up of private transfers to family members and friends, the World Bank says policy makers and service providers could play an active and supportive role in leveraging its development impact by facilitating formal flows and reducing the cost of transactions, the World Bank said.

Kenya’s Finance and Foreign Affairs ministries have responded to the emerging trends with a raft of new regulations on remittances that offer preferential treatment to flows earmarked for investment.

The critical role that remittances have come to play in the Kenyan economy is further indicated in the attention it has received from the National Economic and Social Council (NESC), a key public policy organ.

Mr Bendixen said a revolution in information and communication technology (ICT) has helped drive the flow of remittances into Kenya citing cheaper call and internet charges that have offer easy linkages between remitters and recipients.

The US, England, the United Arab Emirates, Uganda and Tanzania are Kenya’s main sources of remittances with commercial banks, money transfer firms and mobile phone platforms such M-Pesa and Zap as the main channels used to transfer the funds.

The US and England’s leadership of the list of remittances source markets has however caused concern that ongoing economic turbulence in Europe and North America could culminate to a fresh dip in the volume of remittances in the medium term.

The World Bank has however allayed the fears terming the “situation would temporary” citing the recent resurgence in economies such as China, Germany, and India as well as demand for work force in the most developed countries where births have remained low.

“People will continue to move North and money will continue to move South,” said Mr Bendixen.

Remittances to sub-Saharan Africa are currently estimated to exceed $21 billion and are expected to grow by almost two per cent this year despite a weak global economy.

To increase formal flows and deepen their financial markets, the World Bank is asking African government to encourage competition and technological innovation that will help reduce costs and increase access to financial services among local recipients.

Benjamin Musuku, an official with the World Bank’s Finance and Private Sector department, said lack of connectivity to financial systems has hampered the growth of remittances in Africa and urged for improved access to such facilities.

The survey however recorded relative advancement in Kenya where more than four-fifths of recipients received their money through a bank or money transfer firm.

“Despite significant progress in the reporting of remittances throughout the world, most official statistics in sub-Saharan Africa still under estimate the true size of the flows. This is in part due to a focus of data collection efforts on formal channels such as banks,” the bank said.

Link to full article: http://www.businessdailyafrica.com/Remittances%20topple%20tourism%20to%20become%20Kenyas%20top%20forex%20earner/-/539552/1036050/-/item/1/-/4b5sfmz/-/index.html