非洲风险投资融资:一项关于生态系统演变与金融歧视的混合方法研究

Venture capital funding in Africa: a mixed-methods study of evolving ecosystems and financial discrimination

JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS STUDIES · 2025
被引 3
人大 AFT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

通过37场访谈和335家非洲金融科技初创企业的定性比较分析,研究揭示非非洲创始人因投资者同质性偏好获得更多风险投资,而非洲创始人面临更大融资障碍,但随着生态系统成熟,本地创始人正逐步克服这些困难。

Abstract

Abstract Africa’s startup ecosystem is growing rapidly, yet venture capital (VC) funding remains disproportionately allocated to non-African founders. This study investigates the factors driving this disparity, focusing on institutional voids – gaps in legal frameworks, financial infrastructure, and market-supporting institutions – and investors’ perceptions of risk and financial discrimination. We conducted 37 interviews with investors and entrepreneurs to identify the determinants of VC funding, including startup location, founder origin, and international networks. Additionally, a qualitative comparative analysis of 335 African fintech startups revealed the factor configurations that enable startups to secure high levels of VC investment. Historically, the findings reveal that non-African founders have benefited from investor homophily, a preference for investing in individuals with similar backgrounds, to mitigate the perceived risks related to institutional voids. By contrast, African founders faced greater barriers to funding. However, as Africa’s VC ecosystem has matured, local founders have begun to overcome these obstacles. By linking institutional voids to homophily and embedding a postcolonial perspective, acknowledging how historical power dynamics and colonial legacies shape investor perceptions and market structures, this study sheds light on the systemic biases that shape VC funding. These findings offer actionable insights for investors, policymakers, and entrepreneurs aiming to foster a more inclusive VC landscape.

风险投资创业融资非洲经济制度缺陷金融歧视