DHL director sees SMEs as critical driver for Africa’s sustainable economic growth

Charles Brewer, Managing Director of DHL
Express for Sub Saharan Africa has said that SMEs are clearly the
growth engine for Africa and the critical driver for sustainable
economic growth.
Brewer, in a statement supports the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which forecasts economic
growth in Sub-Saharan Africa in 2014 is expected to be slightly higher
than that in 2013, at around 6 percent. “This growth, coupled with the
more than one billion consumers on the continent who spend $600 billion
annually, as well as having the fastest growing middle class in the
world, and the significant opportunity that connecting with the world
represents, provides African small and medium enterprises (SMEs) with
boundless opportunities in 2014″.
But Brewer said that other than the
usual challenges which SMEs are likely to face in Africa, such as
infrastructure challenges, customs regulations and controls, access to
finance may be an obstacle going forward. “The Institute of
International Finance reported that due to many countries in Sub-Saharan
Africa struggling with controlling price pressures, central banks have
tended to keep monetary policy fairly tight. Despite this challenge, we
expect SMEs to create growth opportunities through increased consumer
spending power and expansion into untapped markets.
He said the growing internet user
penetration in Africa also provides a sizeable opportunity for SMEs, and
as Africa continues to adopt e-commerce as a way of life, businesses
are able to leverage this online market, while reducing traditional
customer acquisition costs. World Wide Worx’s 2012 Internet Matters
report reveals that the local e-commerce market is growing at a rate of
around 30% a year and shows no signs of slowing down.
Brewer said that the more an SME can tap
into global opportunities and the more it can look into global
expansion, the better the chances for growth become. “When it comes to
global opportunities the key to success for many SMEs is knowledge.
Knowing which markets to target, how to market their product, how to
identify customers, how to get paid and critically, how to ship
globally. We have 25,000 SMEs who work with us across Africa and every
day we work on understanding their needs better and help them to go
global.DHL is well-positioned to partnering with African SMEs and
helping them to connect with the world
“According to Deloitte, Africa’s middle
class has tripled over the last 30 years, and the current trajectory
suggests that the African middle class will grow to 1.1 billion in 2060.
As African economies are some of the fastest growing in the world, the
outlook for the continent is very positive going forward.”
“Manufacturing, on a large scale, is
still somewhat embryonic in Africa and as such, there is a definite
opportunity for SMEs to fill the gaps which are not being serviced by
these large global companies. As important, a growing SME base will
create hundreds and thousands of new jobs, which is an absolute must for
this ever growing continent.”
The findings of the 2013 National Small Business Survey,
conducted by the National Small Business Chamber (NSBC), revealed that
the key need expressed by SMEs includes expanding customer base,
increasing sales and going global. “Accessing new markets by trading
across borders is the key to growth and competitiveness and the key
driver for small and medium enterprises in South Africa,” says Mike
Anderson, NSBC founder and CEO in the statement from DHL.
By: Daniel Obi
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