Adapted from TechCentral.co.za: South Africa appears to be losing its status as the preferred
investment destination on the continent for international technology
companies. That honour, increasingly, is going to Kenya, which may be on
the cusp of a technology-fuelled era of economic growth.
When apartheid ended in 1994, there was a flood of investment into
South Africa by international technology companies. Microsoft, IBM,
Intel, Motorola, Xerox, Hewlett-Packard: they all poured millions into
establishing local offices to serve not only South Africa but often
markets across Southern Africa and even sub-Saharan Africa. The view was
that South Africa was the gateway to the continent.
Twenty years later, and perceptions are shifting.
In South Africa, economic growth has flat-lined. In the technology
space, a weak policy making and regulatory environment where fast and
smart decision making just doesn’t happen, coupled with a
disastrous
education system that appears incapable of giving youngsters a solid
grounding in foundational subjects such as mathematics and science, are
undermining prospects.
Last year, when IBM decided to set up its first research laboratory
in Africa, it chose Kenya, not South Africa, as the location for the
facility. The Kenyan lab joined existing IBM facilities in the US,
Switzerland, Israel, Japan, Ireland, India, China, Brazil and Australia.
Over the years, the labs have been credited with inventing many of
the foundations of the IT industry, including the relational database,
computer disk storage and dynamic random-access memory.
The Kenyan lab, which includes pre- and post-doctoral scientists and
researchers from academia, government and industry, will conduct basic
and applied research focused on solving problems relevant to Africa and
contribute to the building of a science and technology base for the
continent, IBM said.
When Google chairman Eric Schmidt visited Africa in January, he
didn’t travel to South Africa, spending time instead in East Africa and
West Africa. In Kenya, he said Nairobi had emerged as a “serious tech
hub” and could become the continent’s technology leader. He praised the
country’s relative political stability (election violence in 2007 and
2008 notwithstanding), its use of the British legal system and its
benign climate, saying these factors all contributed to its
attractiveness as an investment destination.
Google rival Microsoft chose Kenya as the site of its first
“white-spaces” spectrum trial to test the feasibility of using
television broadcasting spectrum for broadband. The list goes on.
And it’s not only international companies investing in Kenya that
have attracted attention. A number of technology innovations have been
developed in Kenya itself in recent years that have garnered
international attention.
The most celebrated of these is M-Pesa, the mobile banking and commerce platform pioneered by mobile operator Safaricom.
M-Pesa has made Kenya an international case study in m-commerce. Aided
by a poorly developed formal banking sector, M-Pesa is now used daily by
millions of Kenyans to buy goods and receive money. It’s since been
exported to other markets, although the only other country where it’s
enjoyed huge success is Tanzania, which also has a poorly developed
banking system.
Another Kenyan tech pioneer is Ushahidi,
a nonprofit software company created in the wake of violence following
the disputed 2007 election. Ushahidi developed open-source software that
could be used to collect and visualise information on interactive maps.
The software was used to show where outbreaks of violence were
happening in Kenya, based on reports submitted by people on the ground,
usually using their mobile phones. This year, Ushahidi is again
attracting attention, thanks to its BRCK
“backup generator for the Internet”, a communications device for
markets with unreliable electricity supply. It’s raised more than $172
000 on crowd-sourcing website Kickstarter.
Kenya’s government is now spearheading efforts to transform the
country into Africa’s tech capital. Work has begun on an ambitious
technology centre called Konza City that could eventually cost as much
as $14,5bn. The government wants to attract international technology
companies to invest in Konza, which will consist of a convention centre,
a science park, hotels and shopping centres spread across a 5 000-acre
site 60km south of Nairobi.
If South Africa doesn’t think its position as the continent’s technology leader is threatened, it better think again.
Adapted from Techcentral.
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