According to a new report by Reuters, the African hair care business has
become a multi-billion dollar industry; so much so that just last year
alone, over $7 billion dollars (N1.7 trillion) was spent!
Read their report below:
With
all the skill of a master weaver at a loom, Esther Ogble stands under a
parasol in the sprawling Wuse market in Nigeria's capital and spins
synthetic fibre into women's hair. Nearby, three customers - one in a
hijab - wait for a turn to spend several hours and $40 to have their
hair done, a hefty sum in a country where many live on less than $2 a
day.
While still largely based in the informal economy, the
African haircare business has become a multi-billion dollar industry
that stretches to China and India and has drawn global giants such as
L'Oreal and Unilever.
Hairdressers such as Ogble are a fixture of
markets and taxi parks across Africa, reflecting both the continent's
rising incomes and demand from hair-conscious women.
"I need to
braid my hair so that I will look beautiful," said 25-year-old Blessing
James, wincing as Ogble combed and tugged at the back of her head before
weaving in a plait that fell well past the shoulder.
While
reliable Africa-wide figures are hard to come by, market research firm
Euromonitor International estimates $1.1 billion of shampoos, relaxers
and hair lotions were sold in South Africa, Nigeria and Cameroon alone
last year. It sees the liquid haircare market growing by about 5 percent
from 2013 to 2018 in Nigeria.
This does not include sales from
more than 40 other sub-Saharan countries, or the huge "dry hair" market
of weaves, extensions and wigs crafted from everything from synthetic
fibre to human or yak hair.
Some estimates put Africa's dry hair
industry at as much as $6 billion a year; Nigerian singer Muma Gee
recently boasted that she spends 500,000 naira ($3,100) on a single hair
piece made of 11 sets of human hair.
In one clue to the
potential for Africa, market research firm Mintel put the size of the
black hair care market in the United States at $684 million in 2013,
estimating that it could be closer to $500 billion if weaves, extensions
and sales from independent beauty stores or distributors are included.
What is certain is that Africa's demand for hair products, particularly those made from human hair, is only growing.
"It
hurts, but you have to endure if you want to look nice," said Josephine
Ezeh, who sat in Wuse market cradling a baby as a hairdresser tugged at
her head. "Hair is very, very important."
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