For years, conversations about Africa’s development were dominated by aid, intervention, and dependency but Tony and Dr. Awele Vivien Elumelu decided to choose a different direction, one built on enterprise, ownership, and the belief that African entrepreneurs deserve access to opportunity at scale.
That vision has now received one of the world’s most visible recognitions.
The Nigerian couple has been named among the honorary recipients on the TIME100 Philanthropy 2026 list, an acknowledgment of the expanding influence of the Tony Elumelu Foundation and its role in reshaping the landscape of entrepreneurship across Africa.
Since launching the foundation’s flagship entrepreneurship programme in 2015, the Elumelus have overseen what has become one of the continent’s largest privately funded interventions for young entrepreneurs. What was initially announced as a $100 million commitment to support 10,000 African entrepreneurs over a decade has grown far beyond its original projections.
More than 27,000 entrepreneurs across Africa have now received seed funding, mentorship, business training, and access to networks through the initiative. The foundation’s reach extends across all 54 African countries, touching sectors as varied as agriculture, technology, healthcare, manufacturing, energy, logistics, fashion, and the creative economy.
The scale of response revealed something many institutions had underestimated for years: Africa was not lacking ideas but It was lacking access.
Applications to the programme soon climbed into the hundreds of thousands annually, forcing an expansion beyond direct grants into digital education and open-access entrepreneurial training. Today, the foundation says more than 2.5 million Africans have engaged its learning platforms and business resources.
At the centre of the initiative is a philosophy Tony Elumelu has repeatedly articulated over the years: “democratizing luck.”
The expression has become closely associated with the Nigerian banker and investor’s wider belief that talent and ambition exist everywhere across Africa, even when opportunity does not. Through the foundation, that idea moved from rhetoric into infrastructure.
The businesses supported by the programme have collectively generated billions of dollars in revenue and created employment opportunities across multiple African economies. Equally significant is the changing demographic profile of beneficiaries. Women, who represented a relatively small portion of early cohorts, now account for more than half of the entrepreneurs funded by the foundation.
Behind the numbers is a broader ideological position that has defined Tony Elumelu’s public interventions for more than a decade.
Through his advocacy of Africapitalism, the idea that Africa’s private sector must take responsibility for driving long-term economic transformation, Elumelu has consistently argued that sustainable development on the continent cannot be outsourced. His position has often challenged conventional models that frame Africa primarily through the lens of aid and external rescue.
That approach has not isolated the foundation from international collaboration, instead it has attracted it.
The Tony Elumelu Foundation has worked alongside institutions including the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the European Commission, Germany’s GIZ, the French Development Agency, Google.org, and the Ikea Foundation. Yet even within those partnerships, the foundation’s identity has remained unmistakably African - African-led, African-focused, and deeply invested in building local capacity.
The TIME100 recognition does reflect the arrival of a distinctly African development model gaining international legitimacy without surrendering its identity or direction.
In an era where narratives about Africa are too often framed around crisis, extraction, or dependency, the Elumelus built an institution around a different premise: that African entrepreneurs, when given access to capital, training, and belief, are capable of building the continent’s future themselves.
That proposition no longer sounds aspirational as it now carries measurable continental weight.