By Mulengera Reporters
In a continent where many still struggle to find footing after economic shocks, Equity Group has emerged as one of the few banks turning business into a lifeline.
The bank, through its community-centered programs, says it reached more than 447,355 vulnerable households in 2024 alone, giving out $199.7 million in cash transfers and $31 million in affordable loans aimed at helping families rebuild, farmers increase productivity, and refugees start afresh.
The figures were contained in the Group’s fourth annual sustainability report released in Nairobi this week, under the theme “A Sustainable World is a Transformed Africa.”
Equity Group CEO Dr. James Mwangi said sustainability has become the compass that guides every business decision at the bank.
He explained that Equity’s Tri-Engine Model, built on social, economic, and environmental pillars, is what drives its impact, that the bank’s work is no longer about profit alone, and the report emphasizes that the Group’s approach has been helping ordinary people not only to survive but to grow stronger. Through affordable credit, training, and climate-friendly investments, Equity is positioning itself as a catalyst for inclusive growth.
At the heart of these achievements is the Equity Group Foundation, a non-profit arm established in 2008 to transform lives through social protection, education, and entrepreneurship. Under its Social Protection pillar, the foundation has focused on refugees, host communities, and low-income earners by offering cash assistance, skills training, and support for small businesses, aimed at helping vulnerable families move from dependence to self-reliance.
The bank says such initiatives are part of its effort to future-proof its operations by ensuring that growth benefits both people and the environment.
The report also highlights how the bank is now tightening governance systems, managing environmental risks, and investing in climate finance.
Group Chairman Prof. Isaac Macharia noted that Equity’s model is designed to build long-term stability. He said the bank continues to invest in its people, technology, and environmental protection as part of a bigger mission to shape a sustainable African economy.
The event in Nairobi was attended by several dignitaries, including French Ambassador Arnaud Suquet, who praised the Group’s role in driving Africa’s transformation, saying Equity’s example shows that Africa can lead its own development agenda instead of waiting for direction from elsewhere.
France, he said, will continue working with Equity to support SMEs, climate-smart agriculture, and inclusive growth.
The report covers the bank’s operations in Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania, DRC, and a representative office in Ethiopia. By 2030, Equity plans to be present in 15 countries and to serve 100 million customers.
The Group also runs a network of subsidiaries including Equity Investment Bank, Equity Bancassurance, Finserve Africa, Equity Life Assurance, Equity Afya, and others, all now operating under the sustainability model.
Through these efforts, the bank hopes to prove that profit and purpose can walk hand in hand, and that Africa’s transformation begins when business starts caring about the people it serves. (For comments on this story, get back to us on 0705579994 [WhatsApp line], 0779411734 & 041 4674611 or email us at mulengeranews@gmail.com).
























