Lions (still)
on the move: Growth in Africa’s consumer sector
Africa
remains a high-potential region, but growth is concentrated in a few markets
and income segments. To win, companies need a tailored, data-driven approach.
Just a few years ago, consumer
spending in Africa passed the $1 trillion mark. The continent’s impressive
growth trajectory at that time—in particular, the robust growth in Africa’s 30
largest economies—caught the attention of consumer businesses worldwide.
Indeed, the consumer-facing sector has been pivotal in Africa’s growth story,
accounting for almost half of the continent’s GDP growth between 2010 and 2014.
But because of the recent slowdown, some executives have
begun to question whether Africa’s once-roaring economy and burgeoning consumer
sector still hold promise. Is Africa truly
worth investing in? Can multinational companies succeed in the region?
Is the African consumer opportunity still as attractive as it once seemed? Our
unequivocal answer is yes—but companies will need to adopt increasingly
sophisticated approaches to compete effectively. In this article, we share our
latest perspectives on Africa’s outlook to 2025 and what it will take for
consumer-goods companies to thrive in the region.
A temporary slowdown
Consumer spending across the continent amounted to $1.4
trillion in 2015, with three countries—South Africa,
Nigeria, and Egypt—contributing more than half of that total. Food and
beverages still constitute the largest consumption category, accounting for as
much as one-third of Africa’s household spending in 2015 (and close to 40
percent of household spending in lower-income countries such as Ghana, Kenya,
and Nigeria), but discretionary categories already make up a substantial share of
consumption. Spending on nonfood consumer goods—including clothing, motor
vehicles, and household goods—accounts for a further 15 percent of consumption.
However, due in part to currency devaluations and a
sharp downturn in oil-exporting economies, spending growth has slowed. Out of
the 15 largest consumption markets in Africa, which constitute 90 percent of
the continent’s total consumption, 12 experienced a slowdown in consumption
growth between 2014 and 2015—the exceptions being Ethiopia, the Democratic
Republic of Congo, and Tanzania.
Clearly, the African consumer is under financial
pressure. In a 2016 McKinsey survey of consumers in six African countries,
two-thirds of respondents said they were worried about their finances and more
than half said they’ve reduced their spending.
The outlook to 2025
Consumer spending in Africa is projected to reach $2.1
trillion by 2025.1The
following strong structural fundamentals are in place to drive the consumer
opportunity:
A young and growing population. The
continent’s population is projected to grow by 20 percent over the next eight
years, with Africa’s youth making up 40 percent of the total. By 2025, almost
one-fifth of the world’s people will be living in Africa. This population
growth is accompanied by falling dependency ratios and an expanding workforce:
the size of Africa’s working-age population is expected to surpass both India’s
and China’s by 2034.
Rapid urbanization. By
2025, an additional 190 million people in Africa are expected to be living in urban
areas, which means that about 45 percent of the population
will be urbanized by then. City dwellers are voracious consumers: per capita
consumption spending in large cities in Africa is on average 79 percent higher
at the city level than at the national level. Cities in Kenya and Nigeria, for
instance, have per capita consumption rates that are more than double the
country rates. The top three cities in Ghana and Angola will account for more
than 65 percent of national consumption spending in each of these countries.
Rising incomes. Since
2005, increases in spending per household have been responsible for about 40
percent of consumption growth in Africa. By 2025, 65 percent of African
households will be in the “discretionary spending” income bracket (earning more
than $5,000). Consequently, the profile of goods and services that Africans
purchase will shift, from basic necessities toward more discretionary products.
Widespread technology adoption. Technology
is opening many new doors for consumers. Mobile money,
for instance, is growing five times faster in Africa than in any other region.
By 2020, half of Africans—up from 18 percent in 2015—are expected to own a
smartphone, which they can use to buy and sell products and services, pay
bills, and make remittances. A study in Kenya found that families with M-Pesa
mobile money were able to withstand financial shocks (such as illness) without
reducing their consumption, because they could borrow money electronically from
friends and family. The success of e-commerce company Jumia—colloquially
referred to as “the African Amazon.com”—is partly due to the fact that it
accepts mobile payments, allowing even Africans who don’t have bank accounts to
make purchases. E-commerce and m-commerce offerings are partially leapfrogging
formal retail, and McKinsey analysis suggests that e-commerce could account for
10 percent of retail sales in Africa’s largest economies by 2025.
These factors bode well for the continued growth
of Africa’s
consumer sector. However, growth will be uneven across countries and
income classes, and the geographic spread of consumption will change. Our
colleagues at the McKinsey Global Institute have identified four groups of
consumers that will drive much of Africa’s consumption growth between now and
2025: those earning more than $50,000 a year in North Africa and South Africa,
Nigerian consumers, middle-income consumers in East Africa, and middle-income
consumers in Central and West Africa.
East Africa’s share of consumption is projected to rise
from 12 percent in 2005 to 15 percent in 2025; Francophone Africa’s, from 9
percent to 11 percent. Meanwhile, South Africa’s share is projected to decline
from 15 percent to 12 percent over the same period, and Nigeria’s, from 26
percent to 22 percent. But given that Nigeria will still account for more than
a fifth of African consumption, consumer companies can’t afford to ignore that
market, even amid challenges in the business environment.
Serving the African
consumer
In previous articles, we’ve discussed some of the
imperatives for consumer companies to succeed in Africa. These
imperatives—such as taking a city-based view of growth, getting credit for
value, tailoring the offer to the local market, and creating bespoke
route-to-market models—are as relevant as ever. But the changing consumer and
retail landscape has highlighted the importance of several other focus areas:
making smart use of advanced analytics across the value chain, adopting
sophisticated pricing and assortment strategies, and being selective about
distributor relationships.
Understand
customers through advanced analytics
Formal retail in Africa is expected to grow by about 5
percent each year over the next few years, bolstered by the aggressive
expansion of international retailers such as apparel players Cotton On,
H&M, and Zara. However, informal retail channels are likely to continue to
dominate the market in sub-Saharan Africa for the foreseeable future.
Because of the highly fragmented nature of informal
retail in much of Africa, many consumer-goods companies rely on a passive
wholesale model and lack a direct relationship with the retailer, limiting
their visibility into retail-outlet performance. But leading companies are now
exploiting big data and
advanced analytics to take their understanding of their customers to
a new level. A consumer-packaged-goods (CPG) manufacturer, to serve hundreds of
thousands of small outlets in Africa, equips its sales reps with handheld
devices that they use for collecting detailed information about, for instance,
an outlet’s product range, pricing, in-store execution, and storage space. This
information, combined with internal data (such as SKU-level sales and
profitability) and external data (such as weather forecasts), helps the company
make outlet-specific decisions about which products should be in the
assortment, how much stock the outlet should have, what types of promotions
will be most effective, and so on. Sales reps then receive specific
recommendations based on the analytics. Early results suggest that using
advanced analytics in this way can drive a 10 to 15 percent sales improvement
within months.
Adopt
a more sophisticated approach to pricing and assortment
In the past, companies could offer just a small range of
products with a basic pricing structure, all targeting the “average” African
consumer. Today, in light of rising income disparities across the continent,
the most successful CPG companies are using tiered-pricing strategies to
capture price premiums from high-income consumers or special consumption
occasions (for example, meals at restaurants or bars) while continuing to
provide affordable price points for lower-income consumers or value-oriented
occasions (such as family meals at home).
Beer companies have long had tiered brand offerings in
Africa. Heineken’s brand portfolio in Nigeria, for example, includes Goldberg,
a value brand; Star, a mainstream brand; and Heineken, a premium brand.
Soft-drinks players take a slightly different tack: they vary their products’
pack formats and sizes. The Coca-Cola Company sells soft drinks in low-cost
returnable glass bottles, nonreturnable polyethylene terephthalate (PET)
bottles at slightly higher price points, and, at even higher price points,
sleek cans or sleeved PET bottles. It sells each of these formats in a variety
of pack sizes tailored to specific occasions; it also adjusts pack sizes from
time to time to ensure that they remain affordable to the target consumer
segments while still being profitable for the company.
Still other companies differentiate their pricing and
assortment by region. One CPG manufacturer studies competitor dynamics,
cost-to-serve economics, and consumer incomes within micro-geographies so that
it can develop region-specific product portfolios and highly localized
discounting tactics.
Choose,
segment, and manage distributors strategically
Many CPG companies’ distributor networks in Africa are
the result of long-standing and often unexamined relationships. It’s therefore
not uncommon for CPG manufacturers to find themselves making big investments
(for example, through discounts and other kinds of trade spending) in
distributors with poor outlet coverage, shoddy execution, or suboptimal
capabilities.
Companies should instead be deliberate about designing
their distribution network. They should select distribution partners who can
help them achieve strategic objectives such as maximizing outlet coverage or
optimizing cost to serve. They should then segment distributors based on criteria
such as size and quality of relationship, and then differentiate their
treatment of each segment—deploying levers such as trade terms, account
planning, capability building, and territory allocation in line with segment
needs or challenges. Finally, CPG companies should closely track distributor
performance on clearly defined metrics (such as volume, outlet coverage, SKU
coverage, and price compliance), establish pay-for-performance parameters, and
conduct regular performance dialogues with distributors. A handful of large
manufacturers, including Diageo and Unilever, excel at these practices. Other
companies would do well to follow their lead.
Africa’s economic lions may not be roaring as loudly as
they were a decade ago, but they are still undoubtedly on the move. Consumer
companies seeking long-term growth would be unwise to ignore the region’s
potential.
By
Damian Hattingh, Acha Leke, and Bill Russo October 2017
https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/consumer-packaged-goods/our-insights/lions-still-on-the-move-growth-in-africas-consumer-sector?cid=other-eml-alt-mip-mck-oth-1710&hlkid=aea1c406e2344c618e58b26394793047&hctky=1627601&hdpid=61ca8442-46bd-4c60-9b6a-321313856cf8
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