The Role of Investment Funds in the Economic Development of the WAEMU
Within the West African Economic and Monetary Union (WAEMU), investment funds have established themselves as discreet yet pivotal players in economic development. By financing businesses that the banking system struggles to support, they are helping to transform the region’s productive sector. Here’s a look at a role that is often overlooked but is fundamental to growth in the WAEMU region.
A Structural Funding Shortfall
SMEs are the backbone of the WAEMU economies: they account for more than ninety percent of businesses and between sixty and seventy percent of employment. Yet their access to financing remains limited. Less than one in five SMEs has access to formal bank credit, according to studies by the BCEAO and the World Bank.
This disparity between the economic weight of SMEs and their access to financing is a major obstacle to growth. On a continental scale, the African Development Bank estimates the SME financing gap at approximately three hundred thirty billion dollars per year. Bridging this gap requires solutions that go beyond bank credit alone.
How Investment Funds Bridge This Gap
Investment funds provide equity capital where debt financing reaches its limits. By taking equity stakes in high-potential companies, they finance growth projects that banks cannot support due to a lack of sufficient collateral. This patient financing, committed over several years, is particularly well-suited to companies in the expansion phase.
The market is gradually taking shape. Between 2012 and the first half of 2024, French-speaking West Africa attracted nearly 4.8 billion dollars in private equity, according to the AVCA. On a continental scale, private equity fundraising doubled to reach approximately 4 billion dollars in 2024, a sign of growing confidence among international investors in the region.
A Ripple Effect on Employment and Business Structure
The contribution of investment funds goes beyond capital. By supporting businesses, they promote standards of governance, financial transparency, and management that strengthen the economic fabric in the long term. An SME supported by a professional investor gains credibility with its partners, customers, and banks.
This support creates a ripple effect: the creation of skilled jobs, the formalization of business operations, and the upgrading of business practices. By strengthening leading companies, the funds contribute to the emergence of regional players capable of expanding beyond their domestic markets, in line with the integration efforts promoted by WAEMU.
The Driving Role of Development Institutions
The growth of private equity in the WAEMU owes much to development institutions. The West African Development Bank, international financial institutions such as the IFC and the European Investment Bank, and bilateral donors have played a catalytic role by providing initial capital to funds dedicated to the region.
These institutions continue to support the private sector: for example, the West African Development Bank and Proparco have signed a €200 million cross-financing agreement aimed at strengthening the private sector in the WAEMU region. It was within this seed-funding movement that, as early as the mid-1990s, the first subregional investment management firm dedicated to private equity in French-speaking West Africa was established.
Cauris Management: Financing and Supporting Businesses in the Subregion
Cauris Management is a concrete embodiment of this model. Established at the initiative of the West African Development Bank and European donors, and operational since 1996, it was the first subregional private equity fund management firm in French-speaking West Africa. Its original mission to develop venture capital to support businesses in the eight WAEMU member states remains the guiding principle of its work.
Financing: Providing equity capital where credit falls short
The initiative takes the form of equity and quasi-equity investments in projects and companies with strong growth potential. This patient financing is specifically aimed at companies that the banking system struggles to support due to a lack of collateral or sufficient track record. The first vehicle, the Cauris Investissement fund launched in 1996, initially amounted to five billion CFA francs approximately 7.6 million euros raised through the West African Development Bank and various development finance institutions.
Over time, the business has expanded through three successive generations of funds, which have enabled more than forty-seven investments in the subregion. The presence in Lomé and Abidjan ensures direct proximity to company leaders and a detailed understanding of on-the-ground realities two essential conditions for financing regional growth with discernment.
Supporting: Creating Value Beyond Capital
Our contribution is never limited to a check. As a long-term, committed shareholder, the firm supports the companies it funds in the areas that are critical to their scaling up: strengthening governance, ensuring the reliability of financial reporting, structuring the balance sheet, opening up networks, and supporting strategic decisions. This support aligns the interests of the investor and the management around a shared goal of creating sustainable value.
Evidence of this comprehensive cycle can be seen in the exits achieved: thirty-eight successful divestitures completed across three generations of funds. Guiding an investment from the initial equity investment through to an orderly exit demonstrates successful support, leaving behind companies that are stronger, better governed, and ready to continue on their growth trajectory.
A Growing Momentum
Private equity remains a young market in the WAEMU, but its trajectory is promising. Economic growth in Francophone Africa estimated to be outpacing the continental average along with regional integration and the gradual improvement of the business environment, are creating a favorable landscape. Investment funds are thus poised to play an increasingly important role in financing regional development.
For business leaders, institutional investors, and development partners, this momentum opens up concrete opportunities: financing sound companies, supporting their transformation, and contributing to the creation of sustainable value across the subregion.
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