RECORDED MUSIC INDUSTRY OVERVIEW
Somalia
Africa
Potential of Recorded Music
MEDI aims to highlight music’s potential as a global tool to reduce poverty and drive economic growth by estimating its worldwide value. This includes projecting how that value could increase if every country had supportive institutions in place, such as appropriate legislation, infrastructure, and policies, and if music achieved full market penetration. We are currently collecting data in each country to support this analysis.
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Local Impact
Over time, MEDI will conduct country-level economic and social impact assessments to better understand how to unlock sustainable growth within national music ecosystems.
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Socioeconomic Indicators
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via World Bank, using statistical databases and publications from national statistical offices, and UN and ESTAT publications. Accessed 15/01/2026.
19,009,151
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via World Bank Development Indicators database. Accessed 15/01/2026.
$26,790
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via World Bank, using national accounts data, and OECD National Accounts data files. Accessed 15/01/2026.
$629.54
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via World Bank, using national accounts data, and OECD National Accounts data files. Accessed 15/01/2026.
4.11%
EXPLANATORY NOTES: No data available from reputable sources.
N/A
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via IMF World Economic Outlook. Accessed 16/01/2026.
3.50%
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via US Census Bureau International Database (IDB). Accessed 16/01/2026.
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via World Bank, using United Nations Population Division database. Accessed 15/01/2026.
54.62%
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via CIA World Factbook. Accessed 15/01/2026.
18.90%
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via CIA World Factbook. Accessed 15/01/2026.
33.90%
EXPLANATORY NOTES: International poverty rate ($2.15 in 2017 PPP). Data via
Macro Poverty Outlook, The World Bank Group. Accessed 15/01/2026.
54.4%
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via International Telecommunication Union (ITU) DataHub. Accessed 15/01/2026.
27.60%
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via World Bank Global Findex Database. Accessed 15/01/2026.
38.66%
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via World Bank Global Financial Inclusion Database. Accessed 15/01/2026.
0.59%
EXPLANATORY NOTES: Data via Cable.co.uk. Accessed 15/01/2026.
$0.50
Industry Infrastructure
Collective Management Organisations
Authors & Publishers
None
Performers
None
Producers
None
Voluntary Joint Ventures & Umbrella entities for licensing users
None
Associations
Music Authors
None
Music Publishers
None
Music Performers
None
Sound Recording Producers/Labels
None
Other
None
Music Export Office
None
Joint Industry Body
None
Policies
Culture Policy/Strategy
None
Music Policy/Strategy
None
Legal Framework
Digital and Performance Rights Treaties
Other Treaties
National Copyright Legislation
Official statutory text currently unavailable.
National Treatment
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“National Treatment” refers to the assimilation of the treatment of foreign right holders to that of domestic right holders. It is a basic rule of most international conventions and mandates that foreign rights holders from contracting countries must receive the protection within any other contracting country as that country grants to its own nationals, ensuring equal rights under the scope of the relevant convention.
General national treatment obligations are set out in Article 5 of the Berne Convention and Article 2 of the Rome Convention, providing that the members of respective conventions must grant to each other’s nationals the rights provided in the convention. Berne Convention also extends the national treatment to “the rights which their respective laws do now or may hereafter grant to their nationals,” while Rome Convention members are not obliged to extend national treatment to the rights of performers and producers of phonograms which are accorded under their national law over and above the rights enshrined in the Rome Convention.
The criteria for eligibility for protection are provided in Article 3 of the Berne Convention and Articles 4 and 5 of the Rome Convention. With regards to national treatment of producers of phonograms, members of the Rome Convention may reserve the right not to apply either the criterion of fixation or that of publication of the phonogram.
As per WIPO, the total number of members to the key treaties above is as follows:
Berne Convention: 181 Members
Rome Convention: 98 Members
WIPO Copyright Treaty: 118 Members
WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty: 114 Members
TRIPS Agreement: 166 MembersThis is a high-level overview concerning national treatment of music authors, performers and producers of phonograms; for comprehensive and detailed provisions, refer to the laws of each country. The overview:
1) details only the criteria applicable to foreign rights holders, without including the broader set of qualification rules for domestic protection that do not concern them,
2) is limited to performance rights and digital exploitation of recorded music, including works and other protected objects:
- “Performance rights” include radio and TV broadcasting, public performance, and communication to the public,
- “Digital exploitation” includes reproduction rights, distribution rights, communication to the public and making available rights.
The term "based on reciprocity" used in the overview for some countries means that Country A will protect the works of authors or other right holders who are nationals of Country B that is not a member of treaties Country A is a party to, and whose works or other protected objects were first published outside of Country A, only if Country B offer similar copyright protection to Country A’s authors or other rights holders and works and other protected objects respectively first published in Country A.
The term "treaty" in the overview includes conventions and international agreements.
Music Consumption
Domestic Repertoire Quotas
No domestic repertoire quotas.
Digital Streaming Services
GLOBAL STREAMING SERVICES
REGIONAL STREAMING SERVICES
DOMESTIC STREAMING SERVICES
None
Key Risks and Opportunities
Risks
With over half of the population living in poverty and a high youth unemployment rate, the majority of the population lacks the disposable income required for premium music subscriptions. The very low GDP per capita suggests that the addressable market for paid digital services remains restricted to a small affluent tier.
Infrastructure and financial gaps create a difficult operational environment. Digital music reach is hindered by a low internet penetration rate, confining the market to a digitally literate urban minority. With credit card ownership near zero, monetisation would have to rely on mobile money or ad-supported models to capture value from the majority of the population.
The legal and institutional vacuum presents a critical barrier to protecting musical assets. Somalia is not a member of any international copyright and neighbouring rights treaties. Without CMOs to track and collect royalties, rights holders lack a key mechanism to monetise their work or prevent piracy.
Opportunities
A massive youth population and over half of the people living in the cities provide a solid foundation for the digital music consumption in the long term.