Doing Business: Women in Africa


A new report from the World Bank profiles seven women entrepreneurs, describing reasons for their success, as well as some of the legal, regulatory, and practical obstacles they faced in expanding their business efforts.

Doing Business: Women in Africa (PDF, 4.15MB) also highlights reforms that can level the playing field for women and create better business environments that benefit both women and men.

The report, the first in a series of regional studies, casts a spotlight on seven women entre- preneurs in Cameroon, Rwanda, Senegal, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, and Uganda.

Read their stories below:

Kah Walla (Cameroon) established a management consulting firm called STRATEGIES in Cameroon with an annual turnover of US$500,000, employing 15 workers and with business reach throughout Africa, Europe and the United States. For Kah, and most women in Cameroon, paying taxes is an obstacle.

Janet Nkubana (Rwanda) founded the handicrafts company Gahaya Links in Rwanda that today has an annual turnover of US$300,000 and over 3000 employees with a business reach spanning Africa and the United States. Janet’s obstacle to doing business in Rwanda was trading across borders.

Aissa Dionne (Senegal) started the interior design company called Aissa Dione Tissus in Senegal that today has an annual turnover of US$700,000 and over 100 employees with a business reach from Africa to Europe and the United States. Aissa’s obstacle to doing business in Senegal was employing workers.

Sibongile Sambo (South Africa) founded SRS Aviation Ltd., an aviation services company in South Africa that has an annual turnover of US$5 million and 9 employees with a global business reach. Sibongile’s obstacle to doing business in South Africa was getting credit.

Zoe Dean-Smith (Swaziland) began a homeware company in Swaziland called Gone Rural Pty Ltd. with an annual turnover of $600,000 and 731 employees with a business reach spanning Africa, Europe, and the United States. Zoe’s main obstacle was registering property.

Dr. Victoria Ksyombe (Tanzania) started a financial services company in Tanzania, Sero Lease and Finance Ltd., with an annual turnover of $US 6 million and an employee base of 60 with 12 branches across Tanzania. For Victoria, getting credit was an obstacle.

Julian Omalla (Uganda) established a juice manufacturing company in Uganda called Delight Ltd. that today has annual turnover of $3.9 million and 450 employees with a business reach spanning Uganda and Sudan. For Julian, starting her business was an obstacle.

More information

Learn more about the World Bank Group's two-year initiative to identify legal and regulatory barriers facing businesswomen in 178 countries.

Resources

Press Release (April 11, 2008): The IFC-World Bank report promotes reforms for women’s entrepreneurship in Africa and identifies legal and regulatory barriers facing businesswomen.

Photos: View photos from the launch event.

Presentation: "Opportunities for women," Doing Business's Simeon Djankov (PDF, 1.3MB).

Enterprise Surveys: Query this database for employment data on women and data on women entrepreneurs.

Doing Business: View summary data on Cameroon, Rwanda, Senegal, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, and Uganda.

Workshop: Leveling the playing field for women.