Why women rarely own factories in East Africa—an analysis of capital gaps, policy failures, and the few building industrial power.
Why East Africa Has So Few Female Industrialists
A structural analysis of capital, manufacturing, and ownership
Executive Summary
East Africa’s entrepreneurial landscape is often cited as one of the most dynamic globally. According to the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor, Sub-Saharan Africa consistently records the highest female entrepreneurial activity rates in the world, with participation levels exceeding 25% of adult women in some markets.
However, this dynamism has not translated into industrial ownership.
While women dominate micro, small, and service-based enterprises, they remain structurally underrepresented in manufacturing, heavy industry, and production-led value chains—the sectors that typically drive export growth, job creation, and long-term economic transformation.
1. The Visibility Paradox
At first glance, East Africa appears to have strong female representation in business leadership.
There are high-profile figures such as:
- Jane Karuku at East African Breweries Limited
- Zarin Merali at Sameer Group
- Rina Hicks in corporate finance
Yet structurally, these roles sit within existing capital frameworks.
👉 They do not represent greenfield industrial ownership or factory-building entrepreneurship.
This distinction matters. Industrialists:
- Deploy capital into production
- Control manufacturing assets
- Absorb long-cycle risk
Executives and financiers, by contrast, operate within pre-existing systems of capital allocation.
2. The Narrow Base of True Industrial Builders
The number of women building industrial capacity from scratch remains limited—but highly instructive.
Tabitha Karanja — Manufacturing at Scale
Through Keroche Breweries, Karanja built Kenya’s only large-scale indigenous brewery competing with Diageo.
- Capital investment: KSh 5 billion+ (~$38M)
- Sector: Highly regulated alcohol manufacturing
- Market structure: Dominated by multinational incumbents
Her trajectory illustrates a rare case of full-stack industrial entrepreneurship—from capital raising to production control.
Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu — Export Manufacturing
At SoleRebels, Alemu built a globally distributed manufacturing brand.
- Export reach: 30+ countries
- Model: Sustainable footwear using recycled materials
- Market: Premium global retail
Her success aligns with broader trade frameworks such as the African Growth and Opportunity Act, which has supported African exports into U.S. markets.
Amina Hersi Moghe — Industrial Infrastructure
Through Suraya Group, Moghe operates in:
- Fuel logistics
- Storage systems
- Trade infrastructure
While not a manufacturer, her role is critical to industrial enablement—ensuring goods move efficiently across borders.
3. Capital: The Core Constraint
Industrialization is fundamentally a capital problem.
According to the World Bank, manufacturing firms in Africa face:
- Higher borrowing costs than global peers
- Limited access to long-term financing
- Heavy reliance on internal capital
Crucially, industrial ventures require:
- Large upfront investment (machinery, plants)
- Long payback periods (often 5–10 years)
- Exposure to currency and import volatility
In contrast, sectors like fintech—highlighted in reports by McKinsey & Company—require less fixed capital and scale faster.
👉 Capital flows accordingly.
4. Structural Ownership Patterns
Industrial assets in East Africa are historically concentrated in:
- State-linked enterprises
- Family-owned conglomerates
- Multinational subsidiaries
For example:
- East African Breweries Limited is majority-owned by Diageo
- Many manufacturing firms trace origins to colonial or early post-independence capital structures
As a result, entry into industrial ownership is constrained.
New founders must:
- Build from scratch (high risk)
- Or acquire existing assets (high capital barrier)
5. Policy and Ecosystem Gaps
Governments across East Africa promote industrialization through:
- Export Processing Zones (EPZs)
- Tax incentives
- Infrastructure investment
In Kenya, for instance, the Kenya Vision 2030 explicitly prioritizes manufacturing growth.
However, these frameworks rarely address:
👉 gender-specific barriers in industrial entry
This creates a policy blind spot:
- Incentives exist
- But access remains unequal
6. The Emerging Shift: New Industrial Pathways
Despite structural barriers, new models are emerging.
6.1 Circular Economy Manufacturing
Waste-to-product systems are lowering entry barriers into industrial production.
This aligns with global sustainability frameworks driven by organizations like the United Nations Environment Programme.
6.2 Light Manufacturing for Export
Sectors such as:
- Footwear
- Textiles
- Consumer goods
offer lower capital thresholds and faster market access.
6.3 Industrial Enablement Platforms
Logistics, energy distribution, and supply chain infrastructure are becoming entry points into industrial ecosystems.
7. Strategic Implications
The scarcity of female industrialists is not a reflection of:
- Capability
- Education
- Entrepreneurial ambition
It is a function of:
- Capital allocation systems
- Ownership structures
- Industrial policy design
For the region, the implications are significant:
- Industrial growth remains concentrated
- Innovation in manufacturing is limited
- Economic diversification slows
Conclusion
East Africa’s industrial gender gap is not an anomaly—it is a structural outcome.
While women lead in entrepreneurship, they remain largely excluded from:
👉 ownership of production systems
However, the few who have crossed that threshold—such as Tabitha Karanja and Bethlehem Tilahun Alemu—demonstrate that industrial participation is possible when capital and access align.
The next phase of the region’s economic transformation will depend on whether those pathways expand.
Until then, female industrialists in East Africa will remain:
Not absent—but structurally rare.