“It’s a tough field.” – The experiences of a Hungarian businessman in Africa

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Globoport.hu talked with Kálmán Képes, the director of the Hungarian Trade & Cultural Centre (HTCC) in Ghana, about opportunities for Hungarian enterprises in Ghana and the difficulties one has to face if wanting to do business in Ghana.
Globoport: How did you end up in Africa and what motivated you to live and work in Ghana?
Kálmán Képes: I ended up in Africa by an accident and I’ve been living and working here for almost 12 years. Earlier I worked in Vietnam and other countries. Now I am the director of the HTCC in Accra, the capital and largest city of Ghana. I came here 5 years ago, before that I worked in Kenya for 6 years. I left Kenya at the time of the terror attacks.
I came to Ghana at the suggestion of a friend. First I only came for ten days but I really liked the country and I saw great opportunities here so I decided to move to West Africa from East Africa. After a year of gathering information, I made an arrangement with Sándor Balogh, the president of the HTCC network, that we would open a trade office and go in quest of Ghanaians that once studied in Hungary. Before the change of regime, many people came to study in Hungary from Ghana, and then returned to their homeland after graduating and some of these people had a very successful career.
Globoport: Professionals and businessmen dealing with Africa have been saying that Hungary should renew those relations that flourished in the 70s and 80s but later discontinued. Some people have been also referring to those African students that spent a few years at Hungarian universities and even speak our language. This seems like a serious possibility to enter the African market. What are your experiences about Hungarians in Ghana?
Kálmán Képes: Basically, I was the first in Ghana to find and get in touch with these people. I tried to gather them and wanted to get to know them. I organised dinners for them at the HTCC in Accra. In the beginning it all went well. Many of them hardly believed that there was Hungarian representation in Ghana again, but they were very happy about it, because they felt very offended when Hungarians just simply left Ghana in the 1990s. Unfortunately, other people took our positions in our absence which makes our situation harder.
This wasn’t necessarily successful because we had to experience that for them cooperation with Hungary would have meant something different than what we wanted. In the future we might prefer relations based on professionality, not on emotions. What I mean by this is that in the future, we would like to work with Ghanaians that are reliable and honest but are not connected to Hungary. However, we should keep in mind that personal relations are still very important in Africa, so we are trying to look for the right people.






Just to let you know Mr Kalman Kepes director of HTCC in Accra rented my property as HTCC office moved out without paying five months rent. he also left 2400 cedis electricity bill unpaid. you can contact me at Zongo1@hotmail.co.uk.THANK YOU