Source: New Era Live
This International Women’s Month, the Coca-Cola Company and its partners are proud to celebrate exceeding their 5by20 goal by enabling the economic empowerment of more than 6 million women around the world. About 34% (just over 2 million) of those women enabled by the 5by20 program live and do business in Africa.
The 5by20 goal aimed to assist women entrepreneurs across the Coca-Cola value chain – agricultural producers, suppliers, distributors, retailers, recyclers, and artisans – overcome challenges when establishing and growing their business.
By providing access to business skills, financial services, assets, and support networks of peers and mentors, women entrepreneurs are enabled to overcome social and economic barriers and succeed as entrepreneurs, while also helping create sustainable communities.
The Coca-Cola Company executed 5by20, a global initiative implemented across 33 countries in Africa, where locally relevant initiatives were rolled out.
The 5by20 goal was ambitious, and Coca-Cola knew that it could not achieve the goals alone. Over the last 10 years, Coca-Cola worked with countless partners, including bottling partners, civil society organizations, government stakeholders, other private sector actors, and generous financial grants from the Coca-Cola Foundation to recipients within its Women’s Entrepreneur Empowerment priority giving tier.
The Coca-Cola Foundation has funded some of the 5by20 initiatives, and the Coca-Cola system has worked with several partners to implement over 300 programs in 100 countries to provide women entrepreneurs with business skills training, mentoring networks, financial services, and other assets to help enhance their businesses and lives, as well as provide more for their families.
Women’s empowerment and progress against all the Sustainable Development Goals require the collective effort of governments, civil society, NGOs, and private sector organizations. Over the last 10 years, Coca-cola worked with countless partners who helped bring the aspiration to life. Partnerships with organizations, such as UN Women, Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), Women Enterprise Fund (WEF), Department for International Development (DFID), USAID, International Finance Corporation (IFC) MercyCorps, TechnoServe, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Hand in Hand Southern Africa, and several other regional and local partners were critical to the success of the 5by20 program.
In 2012, the Coca-Cola Company signed a global agreement with UN Women to enable the economic empowerment of women entrepreneurs in three pilot countries, which included South Africa. At the end of the four-year partnership in South Africa in December 2016, over 25 000 women micro-entrepreneurs had received business skills, leadership training, mentoring, and peer networking skills as well as access to finance.
Kennedy School Corporate Social Responsibility Initiative, through this program, the entrepreneurs increased their revenues by 40% on average and increased their confidence and leadership abilities within their communities.
In Kenya, a partnership with the Women Enterprise Fund (WEF) established in 2014 and rooted in a shared interest in creating a fair equitable environment to help women overcome barriers and build sustainable businesses, aimed to empower 1 million women through entrepreneurship training and access to capital investment. At the end of 2020, nearly 800 000 Kenyan women were empowered through the initiative.
In Nigeria, in partnership with the UK Department for International Development Girls Education, we launched the Educating Nigerian Girls in Nigeria Enterprise (ENGINE) value program, which aimed to strengthen the educational and economic opportunities of the Nigerian girl-child. Nearly 13 000 young girls and women benefitted from this program. We also entered into a partnership with the Lagos State Government Employment Trust Fund (LSETF) to train 1 000 women in Lagos state on financial literacy and communications skills. “[On] this International Women’s Day, we celebrate surpassing our goal to reach 5 million women, but we know that there is still work to be done,” said Patricia Obozuwa, Vice President: Public Affairs, Communication, and Sustainability Coca-Cola Africa.
“Women entrepreneurs continue to face major hurdles hindering their successes, and we acknowledge that our work must therefore continue, particularly given the significant socio-economic disruption created by the pandemic in so many communities around the world”.
The Coca-Cola Company is a global organization but a local business and deeply rooted in the local communities we proudly serve. We thrive as communities prosper and numerous studies from the United Nations and academic institutions have repeatedly proven that investment in women spurs economic growth and promotes sustainable development.
“By investing in women’s economic empowerment over the past decade, we have created shared value in hopes of a better-shared future, enabling improved livelihoods for women, their families, and their communities, while inclusively expanding our business,” said Obozuwa.
“We are proud about the ripple effects that these programs have had on the millions of lives we have touched and will continue to have over the years to come.”