Africa's tech industry is expected to contribute more than $750 billion to the continent's GDP by 2050, but it still has a long way to go when it comes to promoting women in leadership roles.
A recent report by Disrupt Africa found that of 2,395 startups tracked, only 350 (14.6%) had at least one female co-founder, and 230 (9.6%) had a woman CEO, Quartz reports.
"While there are increasingly more opportunities to be done to achieve gender parity from a leadership perspective within the space, the data shows that there is still a long way to go," Anna Ekeledo, executive director of AfriLabs, tells Quartz.
"I envision a future where women founders are empowered and supported, where they have equal opportunities to access capital, mentorship, and resources."
Ekeledo's organization works with more than 400 technology and innovation hubs spread across 52 African countries and the diaspora, and she tells Quartz that it's vital to support women in leadership positions in order to achieve gender parity in Africa's tech industry.
A 2020 study by Google and the International Finance Corporation found that Africa's digital economy could contribute more than $180 billion to the continent's GDP by 2025, and more than $750 billion by 2050.
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