Africa, with the help of its diaspora, is building its sovereignty and pursuing its development by mobilizing its own resources.
For a long time, Africa was associated with international aid. Today, the paradigm is changing. Capital is now flowing into the continent’s strategic sectors:
💳 Fintech, agritech, health technologies: attractive to venture capital and investment funds.
🚛 Infrastructure and logistics: supported by sovereign wealth funds from the Gulf and Asia.
📈 Domestic financial markets: developing thanks to local savings (pensions, insurance).
🌐 The AfCFTA (African Continental Free Trade Area) acts as a catalyst, promoting regional industrialisation and integrated value chains.
Professor Joshua Yindenaba Abor explains that for Africa, “making capital work better” must not be limited to financial returns.
It is a multidimensional capital:
👩🏽🎓 Human: youth, education, skills, entrepreneurship.
🤝 Social: trust, inclusive institutions, community networks.
🌱 Natural: biodiversity, land, water, renewable energy, sustainably valued.
📊 This broader vision invites us to measure Africa’s wealth by more than just GDP.
To reduce dependence on unstable external financing, the priorities are as follows:
💰 Mobilise national savings (pension funds, insurance, African SWFs).
🏗️ Encourage local investment (infrastructure bonds, PPPs).
🚫💸 Fight illicit financial flows and optimise tax systems.
📑 Create financial instruments adapted to SMEs, the backbone of African economies.
🌍 The African diaspora represents an underutilised capital force. Beyond remittances, it can invest in:
🌐 Regional impact funds,
🏭 Strategic industrial projects,
💡 Digital innovation and the energy transition.
🔑 The future lies in an integrated vision of Global Africa, where Africa and its diasporas together shape productive, sustainable, and sovereign capital.
Discuss the latest opportunities, ask for advice, access resources shared by the community and more !