Beyond Demographics: Understanding The Complexity Of South Africa’s Women’s Market

Loading player...
Guest – Andrew Fulton, Director at Eighty20

The 2025 Income & Expenditure survey reveals some noteworthy South African realities. One is that on average, women still earn significantly less than men, with female-headed households earning R93,540 compared to R176,812 for their male counterparts. This topline figure, however, obscures a more nuanced story that forward-thinking brands are utilising. When controlling for education and employment status (for instance full-time employed women with postgraduate degrees) female earnings rise as high as 90% of its male counterparts.

According to recent MAPS and StatsSA data, there are nearly 1.5 million more women than men in the country (they tend to live five years longer), women represent 59% of undergraduate degree holders, 52% of smartphone owners and contribute 45% of national income. Declining fertility rates (from 2.78 children per woman in 2008 to 2.21 today) have accelerated women's participation in higher education and workforce entry, fundamentally reshaping consumer spending patterns across most categories.
13 Aug 2025 1PM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

PPS Delivers R6.88bn in Profit‑Share

PPS Group CEO Izak Smit unpacks a second consecutive record year, with R6.88bn allocated to members and R6.67bn paid in claims. He explains the strength of the mutual model.
22 Apr 4PM 16 min

Capitec’s R16.8bn Year

Capitec CEO Graham Lee discusses the bank’s 23% earnings surge, its diversified business model, and the rapid rise of digital payments.
22 Apr 4PM 14 min

Inflation Through the Eyes of the Consumer

Eighty20 Director Andrew Fulton translates the CPI numbers into real‑world household pressure. From meat‑led food inflation to the looming oil shock, he explores which consumers are most exposed and how spending behaviour is shifting.
22 Apr 4PM 9 min

SA’s Draft AI Policy: The Cost of Getting It Wrong

Free SA spokesperson Gideon Joubert discusses the organization's concerns about South Africa’s Draft National AI Policy—including expanded bureaucracy, duplicated institutions, and barriers for startups.
21 Apr 4PM 5 min