₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,326,503 members, 8,426,864 topics. Date: Monday, 15 June 2026 at 03:16 AM

Toggle theme

Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat - Celebrities - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumEntertainmentCelebritiesResearch By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat (7609 Views)

1 2 Reply (Go Down)

Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by umarnuhu1900(op): 8:29am On Dec 12, 2025
Research by Harvard Highlights Income Loss and Structural Challenges for Afrobeats - Eta
Afrobeats has become one of the world’s most influential musical forces. Nigerian artists sell out global arenas, dominate streaming charts, and shape global pop culture. Yet beneath the success lies a fundamental problem: Africa captures only a small fraction of the wealth generated by the Afrobeats boom. Emerging research—including a new report out of Harvard Law School’s Center for the Study of African Economies and Societies (CSASE)—reveals a troubling pattern of structural income loss that threatens the future of the industry.


In 2023, Afrobeats generated around $100 million globally, but only a tiny fraction of that income reaches African creators. Despite being one of the fastest-growing music markets, Africa remains the lowest royalty-earning region worldwide. The report from Harvard points out that the gap is not accidental, but structural.

Harvard alumna Professor Olufunmilayo Arewa, who authored the report, points out that Afrobeats rose to global prominence during a period when the music industry was undergoing major changes. Streaming reshaped revenue models, shifting power to three major global labels, namely Universal, Sony, and Warner. Digital platforms such as Spotify, YouTube, and TikTok also increased in their leverage over musicians and artists. These players collectively control distribution, data, royalties, metadata, and intellectual property norms. African artists enter this system from a position of disadvantage: weaker bargaining power, limited legal resources, and little control over downstream monetisation.

The acquisition of African labels by global majors—most notably Universal’s majority stake in Mavin Records—shows the industry recognises Afrobeats as its new growth engine. But without policy safeguards, these acquisitions risk recreating old extractive patterns: Africa produces the cultural value, while others capture the profit.

Meanwhile, Nigeria’s highly informal economy complicates revenue collection. Up to two-thirds of the economy operates outside formal systems. For years, informal circulation boosted artist visibility, but it also weakened data systems, copyright protection, and revenue tracking. Even massive cultural events like Detty December, drawing more than a million visitors in 2024, remain undermeasured.


A strategic session hosted by the Harvard Law School CSASE and Lagos-based Rise Interactive Studios will be taking place in Lagos tomorrow. The exclusive event will examine strategic responses that industry, policymakers, and creatives themselves can take to help turn the tide of royalty loss. Leaders in Artificial Intelligence, such as Dr. Toyosi Akinrele-Ogunsiji, Founder and CEO of Rise Interactive Studios, top artists, senior policymakers, and academics will join the Harvard-trained author of the CSASE Report, Professor Olufunmilayo Arewa, to discuss the Report’s recommendations.

Afrobeats sits at a strategic turning point. Its cultural influence is secure. The economic question is what Africa will choose to do next. The CSASE Report, which is the first one written by an African for African creatives, is an important instrument to help guide our way forward.

The world is already dancing to African music. The question is whether Africa will build the systems to profit from it.
https://www.etamagazine.com/research-by-harvard-highlights-income-loss-and-structural-challenges-for-afrobeats-africa-must-act-now/#google_vignette

Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by Pootle: 5:14pm On Dec 12, 2025
its normal every music have its time
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by tanigororo: 5:15pm On Dec 12, 2025
We Kuku Know we are being ripped off, our government who could have helped are not helping
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by adamkkk: 5:15pm On Dec 12, 2025
they always seem to be very rich bt get close to them and u will be surprised. Mostly those under a record label. Some are even paid monthly as salaries.
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by helinues: 5:16pm On Dec 12, 2025
Reggae is actually rugged. It has been reigning even before Afro beat and still reigning

Alternative music is my favourite music genre. Too inspiring. You will always hear everything is going to be alright in the songs
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by PulaPower: 5:19pm On Dec 12, 2025
Research by Harvard Highlights Income Loss and Structural Challenges for Afrobeats

White fascist have done another wuruwuru research. They’re shocked about the success of Afro beats..

Afro beat us here to stay and grow forward. We’re no longer in 1970..
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by SixSeven: 5:21pm On Dec 12, 2025
Here’s a message written with the assistance of AI. Africans must learn to tell their own story and be proud of it. Stop waiting for oyinbo to validate all you know. I see the OP mistake beat with beats too

🎶 AFROBEAT vs AFROBEATS — Seun Kuti Sets the Record Straight 🎶

A lot of people still mix these two up, so here’s what Seun Kuti recently said — and it’s eye-opening 👇🏾

According to Seun, “Afrobeats” is not a real genre.
It’s a title, a broad label created to group different styles of modern African music. Today’s Afrobeats artists can jump from amapiano to dancehall to pop — meaning there’s no single, consistent sound that defines it.

He even pointed out that Amapiano is now being called the new Afrobeats, which shows how fluid the label has become.

On the other hand, Afrobeat (no ‘s’) — the music pioneered by Fela Kuti — is a clearly defined genre with its own structure, instrumentation, and strong political message.

So in Seun Kuti’s words:
👉🏾 Afrobeats = a marketing label
👉🏾 Afrobeat = a real genre with roots, rules, and resistance

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1x09tZBMhm4

Fela stops a performance here when his band man makes a mistake. How many of our afrobeats can play an instrument? They are just commercial papers for the people exploiting them. It will come out in a few years.

Jide Taiwo today on Nigeria Info helps to keep track of our own story for our AUTHENTIC MUSIC
https://www.youtube.com/live/d8TKd9SegFU
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by ednut1(m): 5:21pm On Dec 12, 2025
na oyinbo package am, na them go still benefit most. they did it with reggae and dancehall too. they are done with afrobeat
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by Omoawoke(m): 5:23pm On Dec 12, 2025
You guys should just know that Africa is never loved and anything good coming out of Africa would be downplayed,
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by SixSeven: 5:27pm On Dec 12, 2025
ednut1:
na oyinbo package am, na them go still benefit most. they did it with reggae and dancehall too. they are done with afrobeat
Because our people are mentally colonized. They crave the white man's approval. And we are our worst enemy. The Detty December is an exploitation of ourselves. Just watch how the artitstes who were made with their original tunes will charge pounds and dollars in Nigeria. We don't value what we have. Poverty of the mind and poverty of the soul. We don't think of the future.
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by Codes151(m): 5:29pm On Dec 12, 2025
What do you expect when NCC is ran by illeterates
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by ednut1(m): 5:30pm On Dec 12, 2025
SixSeven:
Because our people are mentally colonized. They crave the white man's approval. And we are our worst enemy. The Detty December is an exploitation of ourselves. Just watch how the artitstes who were made with their original tunes will charge pounds and dollars in Nigeria. We don't value what we have. Poverty of the mind and poverty of the soul. We don't think of the future.
the big countries control the world its not about slave mentality. at least our artists are able to buy cars/houses in billions vs in the past lol. Naso life be
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by maasoap(m): 5:32pm On Dec 12, 2025
That's what you get for being informal
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by Sirleo05: 5:42pm On Dec 12, 2025
Too many shows outside 9ja without properly understanding terms of the contracts . To them, one or two million is ok for them , the rest no border them.
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by AlphaTaikun: 5:43pm On Dec 12, 2025
umarnuhu1900:
Research by Harvard Highlights Income Loss and Structural Challenges for Afrobeats - Eta


https://www.etamagazine.com/research-by-harvard-highlights-income-loss-and-structural-challenges-for-afrobeats-africa-must-act-now/#google_vignette
The acquisition of African labels by global majors—most notably Universal’s majority stake in Mavin Records—shows the industry recognises Afrobeats as its new growth engine. But without policy safeguards, these acquisitions risk recreating old extractive patterns: Africa produces the cultural value, while others capture the profit.

Meanwhile, Nigeria’s highly informal economy complicates revenue collection. Up to two-thirds of the economy operates outside formal systems. For years, informal circulation boosted artist visibility, but it also weakened data systems, copyright protection, and revenue tracking. Even massive cultural events like Detty December, drawing more than a million visitors in 2024, remain undermeasured
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by SixSeven: 5:44pm On Dec 12, 2025
ednut1:
the big countries control the world its not about slave mentality. at least our artists are able to buy cars/houses in billions vs in the past lol. Naso life be
They control the world through EXPLOITATION.

Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by AlphaTaikun: 5:47pm On Dec 12, 2025
SixSeven:
Here’s a message written with the assistance of AI. Africans must learn to tell their own story and be proud of it. Stop waiting for oyinbo to validate all you know. I see the OP mistake beat with beats too

🎶 AFROBEAT vs AFROBEATS — Seun Kuti Sets the Record Straight 🎶

A lot of people still mix these two up, so here’s what Seun Kuti recently said — and it’s eye-opening 👇🏾

According to Seun, “Afrobeats” is not a real genre.
It’s a title, a broad label created to group different styles of modern African music. Today’s Afrobeats artists can jump from amapiano to dancehall to pop — meaning there’s no single, consistent sound that defines it.

He even pointed out that Amapiano is now being called the new Afrobeats, which shows how fluid the label has become.

On the other hand, Afrobeat (no ‘s’) — the music pioneered by Fela Kuti — is a clearly defined genre with its own structure, instrumentation, and strong political message.

So in Seun Kuti’s words:
👉🏾 Afrobeats = a marketing label
👉🏾 Afrobeat = a real genre with roots, rules, and resistance

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1x09tZBMhm4

Fela stops a performance here when his band man makes a mistake. How many of our afrobeats can play an instrument? They are just commercial papers for the people exploiting them. It will come out in a few years.

Jide Taiwo today on Nigeria Info helps to keep track of our own story for our AUTHENTIC MUSIC
https://www.youtube.com/live/d8TKd9SegFU
🎶 AFROBEAT vs AFROBEATS — Seun Kuti Sets the Record Straight 🎶

A lot of people still mix these two up, so here’s what Seun Kuti recently said — and it’s eye-opening 👇🏾

According to Seun, “Afrobeats” is not a real genre.

It’s a title, a broad label created to group different styles of modern African music. Today’s Afrobeats artists can jump from amapiano to dancehall to pop — meaning there’s no single, consistent sound that defines it.

He even pointed out that Amapiano is now being called the new Afrobeats, which shows how fluid the label has become.

On the other hand, Afrobeat (no ‘s’) — the music pioneered by Fela Kuti — is a clearly defined genre with its own structure, instrumentation, and strong political message.
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by Helinuse: 5:59pm On Dec 12, 2025
Pootle:
its normal every music have its time
You must comment on everything.

Learn to learn, and not talk.

This is an academic release, it is meant to inform you. It is not a political opinion that is open to debate. The only debate it is open to is one that is backed by empirical fact based evidence. So, learn to learn quietly.
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by alfredilly: 6:02pm On Dec 12, 2025
SixSeven:
Here’s a message written with the assistance of AI. Africans must learn to tell their own story and be proud of it. Stop waiting for oyinbo to validate all you know. I see the OP mistake beat with beats too

🎶 AFROBEAT vs AFROBEATS — Seun Kuti Sets the Record Straight 🎶

A lot of people still mix these two up, so here’s what Seun Kuti recently said — and it’s eye-opening 👇🏾

According to Seun, “Afrobeats” is not a real genre.
It’s a title, a broad label created to group different styles of modern African music. Today’s Afrobeats artists can jump from amapiano to dancehall to pop — meaning there’s no single, consistent sound that defines it.

He even pointed out that Amapiano is now being called the new Afrobeats, which shows how fluid the label has become.

On the other hand, Afrobeat (no ‘s’) — the music pioneered by Fela Kuti — is a clearly defined genre with its own structure, instrumentation, and strong political message.

So in Seun Kuti’s words:
👉🏾 Afrobeats = a marketing label
👉🏾 Afrobeat = a real genre with roots, rules, and resistance

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1x09tZBMhm4

Fela stops a performance here when his band man makes a mistake. How many of our afrobeats can play an instrument? They are just commercial papers for the people exploiting them. It will come out in a few years.

Jide Taiwo today on Nigeria Info helps to keep track of our own story for our AUTHENTIC MUSIC
https://www.youtube.com/live/d8TKd9SegFU
What we popularly call Afrobeats today didn't start as Afrobeat. In fact, it has little element of Afro identity. They were all musical piece inspired by the ambition to identify with global music culture. Before their emergence, African musicians showcases various brand that is rooted in indigenous culture and tradition. There was Juju, Apala and many more in Yoruba land. A more nationwide song was highlife but that cut across west Africa.

Afrobeats as it's now called was inspired by modern singers who aspire for global appeal by imitating hip hop and other western style singers. American music was the biggest drive and several foreign song were adapt by local musican like Olu Maintain ( e g I catch cold). The Eddy Remedies comprising of Idris Abdulkareem, Toni Tetuila and Eddy incorporated raps with indigenous language modelled in foreign style. There were also the plantation boys of Tu face, face and black face.

The advent of social media popularize the music among global audience who struggled to find specific identity for it. Then came the coinage Afrobeats.

Before then, only Fela Kuti could be credited with anything called Afrobeat when he transformed his highlights by infusing it with Jazz. What we currently called Afrobeat is cheer opportunism. Nothing more.
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by ViceGovernor: 6:03pm On Dec 12, 2025
I have hundreds of super good music 🎵🎶 but they won't allow me release any until I sign a distribution deal with them, why should I pay just to have you distribute songs for me and take a cut which I cannot ascertain, then you in turn give me peanuts and say that's my percent..... meanwhile I won't be allowed to know the exact amount those songs generated.
Why??

There's so many questions to be asked concerning payments for afrobeat musicians
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by Flangelo12: 6:05pm On Dec 12, 2025
tanigororo:
We Kuku Know we are being ripped off, our government who could have helped are not helping
Abaribe should sign contract for you.

Abi Tinubu should do DJ?

huh
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by Flangelo12: 6:06pm On Dec 12, 2025
SixSeven:
They control the world through EXPLOITATION.
You've said it all.

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by PepeXKermit: 6:07pm On Dec 12, 2025
because its harvard no mean say na sound research
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by Angelfrost(m): 6:11pm On Dec 12, 2025
PulaPower:
Research by Harvard Highlights Income Loss and Structural Challenges for Afrobeats

White fascist have done another wuruwuru research. They’re shocked about the success of Afro beats..

Afro beat us here to stay and grow forward. We’re no longer in 1970..
Calm down and reason...!

Not just Afrobeats sef... Look at the entire industry, and ask yourself, in recent times, what have the numbers been like?!!

Who is really making HITS these days?!!

What's the quality these days?!!



You can't use emotions to mask reality.
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by JohnAOne: 6:14pm On Dec 12, 2025
ednut1:
the big countries control the world its not about slave mentality. at least our artists are able to buy cars/houses in billions vs in the past lol. Naso life be
What do you think is a solution to the problem?
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by ednut1(m): 6:26pm On Dec 12, 2025
JohnAOne:
What do you think is a solution to the problem?
create our own eco system. But Africans/ Nigerians are too poor to subscribe to streaming platforms or pay for expensive shows
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by SixSeven: 6:30pm On Dec 12, 2025
Post removed for double posting.
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by SixSeven: 6:35pm On Dec 12, 2025
alfredilly:
What we popularly call Afrobeats today didn't start as Afrobeat. In fact, it has little element of Afro identity. They were all musical piece inspired by the ambition to identify with global music culture. Before their emergence, African musicians showcases various brand that is rooted in indigenous culture and tradition. There was Juju, Apala and many more in Yoruba land. A more nationwide song was highlife but that cut across west Africa.

Afrobeats as it's now called was inspired by modern singers who aspire for global appeal by imitating hip hop and other western style singers. American music was the biggest drive and several foreign song were adapt by local musican like Olu Maintain ( e g I catch cold). The Eddy Remedies comprising of Idris Abdulkareem, Toni Tetuila and Eddy incorporated raps with indigenous language modelled in foreign style. There were also the plantation boys of Tu face, face and black face.

The advent of social media popularize the music among global audience who struggled to find specific identity for it. Then came the coinage Afrobeats.

Before then, only Fela Kuti could be credited with anything called Afrobeat when he transformed his highlights by infusing it with Jazz. What we currently called Afrobeat is cheer opportunism. Nothing more.
I think what the Kutis are trying to let us know is to preserve OUR ORIGINALITY. Fela himself was in the US until his girlfriend there advised him about his music. They don't want these exploiters who will talk down at you to tell your own story. We should have our own respect and let us be equals at the table but money is easy to dangle to a man who does not know his history or has no ethics or legacy.

TIME will tell. The oyinbo man will group all our music into afrobeats the way they call Africa, a continent of diverse cultures and rich people a country. They know what they are doing. They want to tell the story the way they want it to be told. They want to tell the story as they told us one man came to discover River Niger and Benue. Our people too are mentally colonized so they are not proud of who they are and what they are.

I wrote some time ago about AI and music. That see what is happening with the capitalists. They would replace the musicians very soon by stealing their originality and using their machines to reproduce their works. Theft!!! It is only what humans can do originally that will survive. Any artiste that relies on technology is doomed for failure. Africa has rich original tunes, but they don't want to tell the story. They want to keep portraying us as only good for music and entertainment in front of their people and that they were the ones who sponsored us. That's why they still keep our work in their museums because they know the value of ORIGINALITY. God bless Mama Afrika
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by DMCA: 6:45pm On Dec 12, 2025
I hope say Don jazzy dey read this thing cool
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by osuofia2(m): 6:57pm On Dec 12, 2025
Africans must also find away to blame the West in everything,, before the coming of online streaming, wasn't pirates ripping musicians of the earnings. How much were they making. They should thank their stars for the stream. Who is stopping us from creating our own, busy body researcher
Re: Research By Harvard Highlight Income Loss And Structural Challenges For Afrobeat by ibedun: 7:04pm On Dec 12, 2025
Omoawoke:
You guys should just know that Africa is never loved and anything good coming out of Africa would be downplayed,
Africa please listen

You don’t need anybody’s love if you love yourself!!!

Oyinbo the racist fascist supremacist bast…ds are know for undermining anything black or African. It’s their way. They should be ignored and treated like they don’t exist!!! That’s what China did to them and we are already in the Chinese century.

🤷🏾‍♀️
1 2 Reply

Mo Abudu’s Ebonylife Becomes MBA Case Study At Harvard UniversityNollywood Actress Chika Ike’s Book Bossup Gets Endorsed By Harvard Business SchSpot Chika Ike In This Harvard Business Class Photo234

₦2 Billion Assault Suit Against Odumodublvck Adjourned To April 2026Dame Shirley Bassey is Nigerian!!!Is This Too Much Money Or Money Abuse? See What Young Thug Is Doin With Money