I’m
waiting for Aliko Dangote.
Everyone is. Africa’s richest man, worth $24.7 billion (more than Carl Icahn,
George Soros and any number of lesser Western billionaires) is probably the
most in-demand person at the World Economic Forum here in Abuja, Nigeria. He
enters the Hilton on a red carpet, a mere 30 minutes late, with minders, the
head of his foundation, and the second of his three grown daughters in tow.
The
hotel employees literally bow before him, lesser oligarchs wave and backslap,
and the merely rich try to bum rides on his private plane. “I don’t know what
to do, my wife really needs to get home,” says an Indian businessman to one of
the numerous Dangote staffers hovering nearby, who smiles sympathetically and
promises to look into things.
Dangote himself is unassuming. A 57-year-old man with an almost
shy smile, he’s a practicing Muslim that acquaintances call “generous” and
“prayerful.” He’s also a sharp elbowed business titan, the 24thrichest in
the world, who has survived ten different regimes in Nigeria, building a $2
billion empire on cement, sugar, salt, and more recently, energy. Dangote sat
down with me in his suite at the Transcorp Hilton in Abuja Wednesday to discuss
wealth, power, politics, and the future of Africa. Below are lightly edited
excerpts from our talk:
TIME: I
hear you haven’t taken a vacation in 20 years. Is that true?
Dangote: It used to be. I was working very hard for a long time
to build up my business. Now, I try to take a week’s vacation every two weeks.
We live in Lagos, on Victoria Island, but I like to go to Miami with my family.
I used to own two homes in Atlanta. But it was a lot of trouble. There are
leaky roofs, you have to call people. It takes up too much time to own property
everywhere. Now I stay at the St. Regis. I used to like cars a lot, too. I had
25 of them, Porches, Ferraris. I would drive from Lagos to Kano at 180 miles
per hour. But I stopped that after I had my second daughter.
You came
from a certain amount of wealth. What was your upbringing like?
My great-grandfather was a kola nut trader, and the richest man
in West Africa at the time of his death. My father was a businessman and
politician. I was actually raised by my grandfather. It’s traditional in my
culture for grandparents to take the first grandchild and raise it (Dangote’s
older sister died as a baby in a car accident). I had a lot of love, and it
gave me a lot of confidence.
You
started with a loan from your uncle and built the most successful locally owned
business conglomerate in Africa. What were the turning points?
I always tried to move up the food chain. I started with cement,
and then moved into textiles, and banking. When I was trading sugar, I added
salt and flour, so that then we could do pasta. And then I thought, why not make
the bag for it too? So, we started making packaging.
This is a
very entrepreneurial culture, but not a lot of people have your kind of
success. What did you do differently?
We had a lot of capital, and we were able to build out our own
power grid. The number one thing that kills businesses in Africa is power, or
the lack of power. We wanted to have our businesses completely independent,
with our own grid. So we built it. It took $1.2 billion. That’s a lesson I took
from the financial crisis. It’s so important to have capital. At that point, we
had about $2 billion in debt from expanding so quickly, so we had to scale
back. But if I had more capital [in hand] in 2008, I could have bought so many
things – homes, airplanes, land – so cheaply.
Now you
are going up the food chain again, getting into energy, and in particular oil
and gas refining. Nigeria has a lot of oil, but not a lot of refined gas. A lot
of people feel that Africa could grow a lot faster with more of its own
refinery capacity.
Yes, we’ll finish our refinery in 2017, and with it a
petrochemical factory. This should take us to the next level. It’s all about
integrating what we have. From the sugarcane we use, we can make ethanol.
People say, “why get into agriculture?” but there is huge vertical integration
between food and fuel, and Africa has both. Our rice and sugar business will
create 180,000 new jobs in the next four years. We want to have a market
capitalization of $100 billion by 2017. It’s my goal for my 60th birthday!
What’s
your goal for this World Economic Forum meeting?
I want people to understand what’s really here. I feel Nigeria
is like Colombia. People think about it based on information from 20 years ago.
You think about Colombia, and all you think of is drug cartels, but really,
there’s a lot of investor interest. It’s the same here in Nigeria. It’s not the
1970s. Things have changed.
But isn’t
that the crucial juxtaposition here? You have growth, but no security. You have
8 % GDP growth, and over 200 missing girls that have been taken from their
homes by Boko Haram.
It’s true.
It hasn’t stopped business, but the situation is out of hand. I think the
government is trying to get themselves together [around this issue]. I think
they have been taken by surprise – there are people in places like Spain saying
“where are these Nigerian girls?” It’s good that they’ve asked the US and the
UK to help. And it’s important that the private sector do its part, too. Unless
we create more jobs, we won’t eliminate Boko Haram. Even if we do, another such
group will come. We have to empower our people.”
Credits: Times.com
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