Cote d’ Ivoire’s ecosystem can become a vital driver of tech-supported growth within the broader African tech ecosystem, but challenges remain. Image credit: Sangaré Amara via Unsplash

Cote d’Ivoire Deep Dive Part III: An ecosystem as an image of the country. Unstructured but full of potential

Abderrahmane Chaoui
Founders Factory Africa
3 min readFeb 23, 2024

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Welcome to Part III of our four-part Deep Dive into the Cote d’Ivoire tech ecosystem. In Part II, we delved into d’Ivoire’s post-independence history, heavily influenced by the French colonial experience and Felix Houphouët-Boigny keeping Cote d’Ivoire close to its former colonisers. Following Houphouët-Boigny’s death, internal unrest ensued until 2011, when Alassane Ouattara came to power. This is where we resume our story, with the development of the Cote d’Ivoire tech ecosystem coming to the fore.

Alassane Ouattara built on Felix Houphouët-Boigny’s bet that maintaining unity and stability in the country was a vital step to economic prosperity. His efforts in preserving peace coincided again with an economic rebound. Cote d’Ivoire entered a 6-year period with a steady 8% growth rate between 2011 and 2017 that rhymed with strengthened investments, a reinforcement of the private sector and a diversification of Cote d’Ivoire’s agricultural products, with the country becoming the world’s leading producer of cashew nuts.

The diaspora’s outsized role in Cote d’Ivoire

Yet, in 2012 and at the beginning of its third period of sustained growth, 60% of the population was illiterate, while there were 1.5 doctors per 10,000 inhabitants. Life expectancy did not exceed 55 years. Again, growth without development. Beyond the illiteracy rate, which characterises the inequality gap among the population, the country’s education system has fallen behind international and even regional standards, struggling to build the skills that Cote d’Ivoire needs for its development.

As a result, most corporations in the country turn towards the Ivorian diaspora in Europe (France especially) or from the region (Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso) to hire executives.

This lack of human capacity-building capability is also reflected in the country’s ecosystem. There is an overwhelming majority of expat founders who have, in recent years, been joined by a restrained club of diaspora founders educated abroad. Both these groups also turn towards expat executives to manage their ventures in key strategic positions.

The inefficiency of the education system in Cote d’Ivoire is also reflected in the quality of the country’s scientific research and its broader innovation capabilities. The number of publications and their quality, with Cote d’Ivoire ranked 120th by the Global Innovation Index on its published scientific and technical articles, and the lack of investments in R&D and research considerably reduces the country’s innovation capacity. Only two companies operate in Deep Tech, both with intellectual property acquired from or developed in another country. As such, both Cote d’Ivoire’s entrepreneurial and innovation capacities are seriously hindered by its inability to transform its education system and produce local talent.

Following the country’s long tradition of state liberalism and openness to foreign trade and foreign businesses, the Ivorian ecosystem’s emergence is a lagging indicator of these conditions and long-awaited. The first building blocks of the ecosystem were laid down by international organisations such as Seedstars, who opened the first coworking space in Abidjan in 2012 and implemented some of its programs, raising awareness and stimulating the not-even-nascent ecosystem at the time.

Extract from Sendemo’s discovery report on Cote d’Ivoire that ou can download here

Seedstarts was later joined by other international organisations (Founders Institute, Impact Hub Abidjan) and startups such as Jumia, who were creating the basic business infrastructure (market education, logistics, payments etc.) for startups to emerge in the country. These changes, as is so often the case in Africa’s different ecosystems, came alongside telcos such as Orange and MTN bringing mobile money technology to the country. Therefore, Coet d’Ivore’s ecosystem has followed an unstructured bottom-up developmental path, mostly carried by international organisations, individuals and corporates.

It was around 2018 that things started to accelerate…

You can read the full story here.

Abderrahmane Chaoui is an African ecosystem researcher, consultant, and writer.

Learn more about Founders Factory Africa.

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Abderrahmane Chaoui
Founders Factory Africa

Innovation expert focused on ecosystem building and avisory services to financial institutions and startup support organizations in emerging marets