By Miranda Bageine Musoke

One of the most powerful forces in our economy remains consistently overlooked. It rarely sits in boardrooms, does not dominate headlines, and is too often missing from mainstream success narratives. Yet it is everywhere, embedded in the lives of women who are building, sustaining, and growing businesses in spite of persistent barriers.

Women in Uganda aren’t waiting in perfect conditions, but they are building anyway. According to the 2020 MasterCard Global Index of Women Entrepreneurs, with women owning an estimated 40% of businesses in the country and nearly 1 in 3 MSMEs led by women, they are quietly powering the backbone of the economy.

From market stalls to mobile-based enterprises, women are turning small ideas into sustainable income streams, informal transactions into structured businesses, and side hustles into ventures that support households and create jobs. Yet despite this momentum, much of their contribution remains underrepresented, even as they continue to drive growth in sectors that sustain everyday livelihoods.

This report also shows that women-owned enterprises are heavily concentrated at the micro level, with most employing fewer than five people and very few transitioning into medium-sized companies. There is a growing understanding that traditional, transaction-based models are no longer enough. To help women in business, we need solutions that are relational, practical, and human.

Miranda Bageine Musoke

KCB Bank has been paying attention to the numbers, the stories behind them, the patterns, the untapped potential, and the need for more comprehensive support through its work with women entrepreneurs. This has helped flme (Female-Led & Made Enterprises), our proposition that enables and grows businesses owned and run by women, to expand and evolve. It doesn’t try to be a one-size-fits-all solution, but it offers a different way to think about growth. It combines financial help with mentoring, advice, and access to relevant networks, recognising that a single intervention is rarely enough to make progress. It recognises that a woman starting a business has to deal with more than just capital and revenue. She is dealing with uncertainty, opportunity, and responsibility.And when she gets support that shows this is true, things change.

The business gets stronger and growth is more purposeful. But maybe more importantly, the effects go far beyond the business itself. You see it in safer families, in communities where opportunity is no longer out of reach, and in an economy that grows not just in size, but in who it truly serves. When women are fully supported, their resilience accelerates progress. Uganda’s economic future will not be built around women; it will be built because of them.

The author is the Head of Retail Banking KCB Bank Uganda.