Zambia’s bid to become Africa’s major technology hub has received huge support from a very unlikely source — Vitalik Buterin, the co-creator of Etherium. This follows a campaign by a group of young entrepreneurs who are looking to reinvent Zambia as an African technology hub.
Start-up founders from Southern African countries and abroad are talking to the government about creating the regulatory and business environment that would attract more tech firms and capital. The group is in the process of organising a conference in Lusaka, the capital, in May to draft detailed policy proposals that they believe will see Zambia succeed where previous African tech hubs have stuttered.
“Ultimately it comes down to being welcoming,” said Mwiya Musokotwane, an early champion of the project and the son of finance minister Situmbeko Musokotwane. “If the policy doesn’t really live up to people’s expectations, no one’s going to be there.”
If the policy doesn’t really live up to people’s expectations, no one’s going to be there. Buterin, who helped create the world’s second largest cryptocurrency in 2013, expressed his support in a virtual meeting with Zambian President Hakainde Hichilema earlier this year. That followed a 2019 visit to the country as a guest of Mwiya, who wanted him to view a new charter city outside Lusaka that is also positioning itself to attract businesses.
“I was impressed by everyone I met willingness to go and do big things,” the crypto pioneer said in an interview.
The talks are a further sign of Africa’s recent and burgeoning role as a hotbed for start-ups, particularly in the fintech and e-commerce sectors. Businesses providing financial services to the continent’s millions of unbanked yet online people are attracting the attention of foreign investors particularly from the US, and African firms raised a record US$5-billion in 2021.
Companies including Nigerian payments firm Flutterwave, whose latest $250-million fundraising round valued it at more than $3-billion, are also interested in growing a presence in Zambia, Musokotwane said.
For Hichilema, attracting tech firms could be a means of delivering on one of his key election pledges: boosting employment. More than one in four Zambians under the age of 24 have no income, according to data from the International Labour Organisation, and the ratio has been worsening since 2013. The president’s commitment to resolving the issue played a major role in his August election victory after five previous failed attempts.
He has since created the ministry of technology & science as part of a drive to support the sector and help ease dependence on copper, which accounts for 75% of export earnings. The government is eager to consult with entrepreneurs on attractive policies for the tech industry, including tax incentives, according to Jito Kayumba, Hichilema’s special assistant for economic and development affairs and a former director at Kukula Capital, which invests in young Zambian companies.
“We want to have a much more open-minded approach,” Kayumba said in an interview from Lusaka. “You can’t milk a cow that isn’t fully developed.”
Perseus Mlambo, originally from neighbouring Zimbabwe, was one of the early movers. He started payments platform Zazu Africa in Zambia five years ago, a firm that now accounts for half of Mastercard transactions in the country.
He went on to raise $3-million last year from investors led by US fund Tiger Global for a new venture called Union54, a firm that allows companies to issue their own debit cards without going through a bank. Tiger, the investor firm of billionaire Chase Coleman, has also backed Flutterwave and been involved in talks on the Zambia hub.
“Copper is old and boring,” Mlambo said in an interview from Belluno, north of Venice, Italy. Governments “risk missing the proverbial boat by over-investing in extractives and underinvesting in software. Tech uplifts multitudes of people and the barrier to entry is very, very low.”
Zambia must improve the ease and cost of getting work permits, according to Malawi-born Wiza Jalakasi, vice-president of global developer relations at Chipper Cash, another Africa-focused fintech start-up. And Mlambo said he’s been waiting for a residence permit to be approved since September.
Still, the nation that’s changed the ruling party three times in 30 years already has progressive financial services regulation, making it attractive, Jalakasi said.
“It’s not the biggest market in the region, but you can test things very easily,” he said. “That’s only going to get better with time as these policies are implemented.”