Kenyan women lead rise of Airbnb female entrepreneurs

Airbnb caravans offer an affordable holiday for the entire family.

Airbnb caravans offer an affordable holiday for the entire family.

Published Mar 7, 2017

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Nairobi - Home-renting

site Airbnb is providing women with a new way to earn money and

build businesses with more women than men on the site and women

in Kenya gaining the most, the company said on Tuesday.

Airbnb said women have outnumbered men using the site since

its 2008 launch and there are currently more than one million

women hosts - amounting to 55 percent of users - who have earned

over $10 billion in the past nine years.

A report released to coincide with International Women's Day

on March 8 showed Kenyan women were gaining the most, earning

about one-third of their annual household expenditure from

Airbnb and often using this to launch their own businesses.

Women in India came second in the list, earning 31 percent

of their annual household expenditure through Airbnb.

This contrasted with Germany and France, where Airbnb income

was lowest among 14 countries surveyed, amounting to about three

and four percent of average household expenditure, with many

using this money to supplement part-time jobs.

"Through platforms like Airbnb, women around the world are

finding a new source of supplemental income and a new

opportunity for economic security and independence," Airbnb

said in a statement.

The positive message from Airbnb comes as the San-Francisco

based start-up runs into disputes in cities like Barcelona,

Berlin and Paris that claim it deprives locals of accommodation

for permanent rent and hikes rental prices.

Read also:  Airbnb accelerates deal making

Studies show that one of the biggest obstacles for women

entrepreneurs around the world is lack of access to capital to

start businesses.

But the sharing economy business is billed for explosive

growth, estimated by PricewaterhouseCoopers to reach $335

billion by 2025, from around $15 billion in 2016.

"The money I've made has helped pay part of my sister's

doctorate degree," Airbnb cited one of its Kenyan hosts,

Pamellah Gakenia, as saying.

Globally, women's annual earnings, estimated at $10 778, are

roughly half those of men, the World Economic Forum says, partly

because fewer women have formal jobs.

Women hosts interviewed by Airbnb said they often employ

others to help them with the rental business.

"My cleaner Lulu, a recent migrant from the Eastern Cape who

doesn't speak much English, now earns enough to pay her kids'

school fees," it quoted South African host, Belinda, as saying.

The top five countries for women Airbnb hosts among the 14

surveyed were Kenya where women earned 34 percent of average

household expenditure, India at 31 percent, Morocco 20 percent,

China 19 percent and Japan 15 percent.

The data was based on an email survey of 112,000 Airbnb

hosts with more than 44 000 responses from Argentina, Brazil,

China, France, Germany, India, Japan, Kenya, Mexico, Morocco,

South Africa, Spain, Britain and the United States. 

THOMPSON REUTERS FOUNDATION

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