Africa’s infrastructure debate must shift
Friday, April 24, 2026
A view of the Gisagara peat power plant in Gisagara District. File..

Africa’s infrastructure debate has long been framed as a financing problem. It is no longer.

The latest data from the Africa Finance Cooperation (AFC) shows the continent has crossed a decisive threshold. Domestic capital now exceeds external inflows.

With over $2 trillion sitting in non-bank financial institutions, more than the roughly $1.7 trillion that flowed in from abroad over the past decade.

The real question is not whether Africa has money, but whether it knows how to use its own.

This shift fundamentally changes the narrative. For decades, Africa’s development strategy leaned heavily on foreign capital—aid, Eurobonds, and foreign direct investment.

But those flows are no longer reliable. Official development assistance is shrinking, sovereign bond issuance has slowed dramatically, and FDI remains modest relative to the continent’s needs.

External capital is becoming what it should have always been: complementary, not foundational.

Domestic capital, by contrast, is not just abundant, it is structurally aligned with Africa’s long-term ambitions. Pension funds, insurance pools, sovereign wealth funds, and central bank reserves are inherently long-term in nature.

Infrastructure, roads, power systems, logistics corridors, digital backbones, requires exactly that kind of patient capital. The match is obvious. Yet the connection remains weak.

The problem lies in intermediation. Much of this capital is trapped in short-term, low-risk instruments like government securities. This is not due to lack of interest, but a lack of pipelines, risk-sharing frameworks, and bankable projects that can absorb capital at scale.

In other words, Africa has savings, but not yet the systems to convert those savings into productive assets.

Fixing this is now the continent’s most urgent economic task. It requires regulatory reform to incentivize long-term investment, stronger project preparation capabilities, and institutions that can de-risk large-scale infrastructure.

It also demands a shift in mindset: from building isolated projects to developing integrated systems, where energy, transport, industry, and digital infrastructure reinforce each other.

The prize is enormous. Integrated infrastructure can unlock industrialization, reduce the continent’s $230 billion import bill, and build resilience against global shocks.

It can transform transport corridors into production hubs, power grids into engines of manufacturing, and digital networks into platforms for jobs and exports.

Africa’s future will not be financed from abroad. It will be built from within. The capital is already here. The task now is to make it work.