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Djembe Consultants, Afrilabs ‘Insights Report’ Assesses the impact of COVID-19 on African Innovators

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Djembe Consultants in partnership with AfriLabs have launched an Insights Report that assesses the impact of COVID-19 on the Africa’s young innovators and entrepreneurs. In addition, it also provides perspectives from industry experts as to how African decisionmakers from both the public and private sectors can accelerate support across the full innovation spectrum including education, inclusivity, investment, policy and research and development.

The report was launched during a panel discussion at the virtual 5th AfriLabs Annual Gathering.

Entitled “Building a Resilient Innovative Africa”, the report is a result of a survey of over 1,000 pan-African innovators, entrepreneurs, and startups from both Djembe’s and AfriLabs’ vast innovation and entrepreneurship networks. Framed within the context of key milestones for the continent, including the impending African Free Trade Continental Area (AfCFTA), UN SDGs, and the African Union Agenda 2063, the report also brings together the expert perspectives of individuals from some of the continent’s leading development and private sector organizations including the African Union, African Development Bank, Afreximbank, Honoris United Universities, Mastercard Foundation, Mozilla, SMART Africa, and UN Women amongst others. It features unique insights from regional innovations hubs as well as celebrates inspiring African homegrown innovation success stories.

Djembe Consultants’ CEO, Mitchell Prather, commented, saying; Djembe’s latest Insights Report reaffirms their strongly held belief that the African innovation ecosystem is singularly the most important enabler of widespread socio-economic development.

“Despite the innate resilience African innovators and SMEs have shown during this challenging year, this ecosystem urgently needs further intervention of policymakers and industry supporters to create a more conducive environment for innovators and SMEs to survive and thrive. While the uncertainties of COVID-19 continue to threaten economic stability and growth, future economic prosperity can be greatly enhanced by nurturing the African innovation spirit to prepare the continent for incredible success, just when it needs it most,” he said.

Adding to his remarks, Afrilabs Executive Director, Ms. Anna Ekeledo said, “The continent’s survival DNA, always durable to internal and external shocks of all shapes and forms, proves a resilience in its youthful demographic, one that is constantly creating, innovating, and looking ahead. Though we are have observed policymakers and governments step up to varying degrees, more needs to be done to drive greater innovation inclusivity from securing access to data, to reimagining education, investing in R&D and supporting international expansion. By building a more resilient innovative Africa, the region can truly embrace its full potential.”

Some of the findings;

Scaling Homegrown Innovations Beyond Borders

Strengthening Policy Development to Encourage R&D and Innovation

Driving Innovation Inclusivity – Women, Youth, and Informal Markets

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