Abstract:
Strategic managers and executive leaders have to navigate the
contextual environment in which their businesses operate. To
do so they are required to adapt to unexpected and changing
conditions in order to absorb shocks that arise. During times of
great social or economic turbulence, such as in the aftermath
of the Covid 19 pandemic, global, regional and domestic
conditions are in a state of unprecedented flux. In such
environments, executives must employ heightened capabilities
for strategic sensemaking and must develop adaptive strategic
thinking. Yet, disruptive change can be overwhelming and
constrain the quality of sensemaking and adaptation. In such
situations, tools such as trend analysis, scenario planning
and environmental scanning are ideally employed to assist
executives to enhance their sensemaking faculties.
This whitepaper employs these tools and examines the impact
of the Covid-19 pandemic on the business environment in Sub Saharan Africa (SSA) through the prism of a series of country
case studies, including; South Africa, Mauritius, Nigeria, Angola,
Mali and Chad. Participants from across 10 African countries
contributed to an expert elicitation as forming part of the
research underpinning this paper. The study examined risks
and possible opportunities likely to arise from the pandemic
and how organisations and industries might respond to them
strategically. The study finds that businesses operating on the African continent
will be confronted with increased economic vulnerability in the
coming decade due to the Covid-19 pandemic. It explores the
strategic implications for businesses at various levels, including
at the level of long-term global trade. It finds that Covid-19 will
result in significant resource constraints for African states, who
were already highly indebted before the Covid-19 pandemic.
Simultaneously, the need for structural reforms across Africa
is likely to create opportunities in agriculture, infrastructure
and technology-enabled businesses and training, as African
populations look for new ways to pursue their aspirations amidst
these conditions.
Taking advantage of the opportunities brought about by the
structural changes precipitated by the pandemic will require the
acceleration of a number of enablers of development. These will
include; accelerating the implementation of AfCFTA, and the
associated removal of red tape and barriers to trade, improving
governance and addressing longstanding security concerns,
as well as making critical investments in water and sanitation
infrastructure. Businesses operating in this environment will
need to navigate a diplomatic tightrope as Africa manages its
relationships with global peers such as the United States, the
European Union (EU) and the west generally; versus rapidly
developing relations with China and Russia, who have growing
military, geopolitical and commercial interests on the continent.