Africa has 55 billionaires, far more than previously thought, Nigeria-based Ventures financial magazine says.
They include three women - the mother of Kenya's president, a
daughter of Angola's president and a Nigerian oil tycoon and fashion
designer.
The richest man is Nigeria's Aliko Dangote, with a fortune of $20.2bn (£12.5bn), Ventures said.
The list is likely to reignite debate about inequality between rich and poor people in Africa, correspondents say.
In April, the World Bank said the number of people living in
extreme poverty in Africa had risen in the past three decades from 205
million to 414 million.
'Conservative estimate'
A report earlier this month by research group Afrobarometer
suggested that economic growth in Africa was primarily benefiting a
small elite.
This is the first time the respected Ventures magazine has published a list of rich Africans, reports the BBC's Tomi Oladipo reports from Nigeria's main city Lagos.
The 55 billionaires it has identified are more numerous than the 16 super rich Africans listed by US financial magazine Forbes last year.
It was able to identify dozens more billionaires by using
"on-the-ground knowledge" to overcome hurdles that may have "hampered"
other researchers, Ventures said.
The magazine estimated the 55 billionaires' combined fortunes at $143.88bn, an average of a $2.6bn per person.
Of the 55, 20 are Nigerian, nine are South African and eight are Egyptian, Ventures said.
The richest woman is Nigeria's Folorunsho Alakija, who made her $7.3bn fortune mainly in the country's oil industry, it added.
She also studied fashion in London and made dresses for
Maryam Babangida, the late wife of Nigerian military ruler Ibrahim
Babangida, Ventures said.
Isabel Dos Santos, an Angolan investor and the eldest
daughter of Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, together with
Ngina Kenyatta, the mother of Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta, also
made the cut, it added.
Ventures listed Harvard-trained businessman Allan Gray as South Africa's richest man, with a fortune of $8.5bn.
"This media-shy South African moneyman controls two
investment companies that collectively manage over $50bn in assets,"
Ventures said.
Nathan Kirsh, a property tycoon in the tiny kingdom of Swaziland, also made it on the list.
He is worth $3.6bn, and has business interests in London and New York, Ventures said.
Ventures editor-in-chief Uzo Iweala told the BBC's Focus on
Africa radio programme that its estimate of 50 billionaires was probably
conservative.
"There is this culture of you don't necessarily want to show your wealth, considering the gap between rich and poor," he said.
"If you have a lot of money, there are a lot of people that
you have to support so we think people may be a little reluctant to be
all splashy about what they have and what their assets are."
(BBC News)
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar