THE COFFEE ENTREPRENEUR WHO TRANSFORMS LIVES IN UGANDA: ANDREW RUGASIRA.
Looking at the article below on CNN about Andrew Rugasira "the Coffee entrepreneur who transforms lives in Uganda", it inspired me to think and reflect on the possibility for Africans and many developed countries to not only produce raw materials but transformation to finished products for global consumption.
African countries should work hand in glove, helping each other through an extensive business web or network. I believe Africa as a continent has come of age and the time is ripe when our politicians should focus on increasing responsibility and eradicate preoccupations like corruption.
(CNN) -- Tired of seeing developed nations take the lion's share
of profits from his countrymen's coffee crop, Ugandan businessman Andrew
Rugasira decided back in 2003 that it was time for a new business arrangement.
Uganda
is Africa's second-biggest exporter of coffee beans, currently producing around
3.4 million bags per year. Yet instead of being
refined locally, the vast majority of the country's raw beans have been
traditionally exported in the consuming countries of the West for processing.
But
Rugasira's vision was to create a quality Ugandan coffee company that would be
able to place a finished product on the shelves of both local and international
supermarkets.
A
trained economist, he devised a business model encouraging local coffee farmers
to sell their beans to him at a fair price. His company would then roast,
package and brand the final product, whilst the profits would be split 50/50.
"The
hard part was saying, 'look, I think as Africans we need to begin to look at
ourselves as a solution to some of these problems of systemic poverty and
underdevelopment. We have blessed soils, you guys have a commodity which is of
great value," says Rugasira, recalling his first meetings to convince the
farmers in Uganda's Kasese district.
"We
can pay you a premium price; we can also add value to your knowledge; we can
help train you; we can set up savings and credit co-ops and we can really work
together and begin to own the value chain which is historically being
controlled outside the producer country.
"We
needed to change that -- and through trade we could bring prosperity to our
farmers and their communities."
These
words by Rugasira planted the seeds for what went on to become Good
African Coffee, a Kampala-based company that has helped transform
the lives of thousands of farmers in Uganda.
Over
the last nine years Good African Coffee says it has built a network of more
than 14,000 coffee farmers, who are organized into 280 farmer groups. The
company, which is the first African-owned coffee brand to be available in
British supermarkets, has also helped local farmers to set up several savings
and credit cooperatives.
Every society and economy that's
prospered has done it through their own hard work, ingenuity, dedication and
commitment.
Andrew Rugasira, Good African Coffee
Andrew Rugasira, Good African Coffee
"(It's)
about empowerment and it's also about ownership," says Rugasira.
"It's about owning the value chain, growing the coffee, processing it at
source and it's about exporting a finished product," he adds.
"So
we retain the value, which means we can employ people, we can pay taxes, we can
prosper our farmers and their communities. And that's the only sustainable way
in which societies have prospered -- by moving from low-value agriculture into
high-value manufacturing industrialization."
At
the heart of all of Rugasira's efforts is his strong belief in the
transformative power of self-help. In trade, and not aid, he says, is where
Africa's future well-being lies.
"Every
society and economy that's prospered has done it through their own hard work,
ingenuity, dedication and commitment," he says.
"Not
through charity, not through handouts, and I think that's a powerful message
and it's a powerful model. It's not new, but I think it's one that I think
resonates with consumers who are
Rugasira's
philosophy is clearly defined in "A Good African Story," his book
published earlier this year chronicling all the challenges he and his
enterprise faced -- from gaining the trust of banking institutions to
convincing foreign retailers about working directly with an African company.
He
says he decided to write the book because just a handful of African
businesspeople write about their experiences.
"All
of us have a story," he says. "We need to share that story; that
story edifies, it encourages, it inspires others in our own way and I just
found African business doesn't really write."
By
sharing his story with the world, Rugasira wants to help create a new narrative
about Africa and inspire the continent's next generation of entrepreneurs.
"Seventy
percent of our population on the continent are young people -- the same young
people that we want to set up businesses, become entrepreneurs, innovators in
IT, you name it," he says. "And the only way they'll be encouraged
and inspired is if they read about stories about other African business
people."
Source:
http://edition.cnn.com/2013/06/19/business/good-african-coffee-andrew-rugasira/index.html?iid=article_sidebar
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