Publications /
Opinion

Back
A Bold Agenda for the African Development Bank: Seizing Africa’s Moment in a Fractured Global Economy
Authors
February 21, 2025

Africa First, But Africa Not Alone

As the world grapples with economic fragmentation, geopolitical realignments, and an accelerating polycrisis, Africa finds itself at a historic crossroads. With its vast resources, demographic dynamism, and a growing consumer base, the continent has the potential to reshape global economic narratives. Yet, this potential remains constrained by inadequate infrastructure, limited access to global finance, and persistent structural vulnerabilities. In this new era, the African Development Bank (AfDB) must take a bolder role—not as a passive development financier but as a strategic vehicle for Africa’s economic sovereignty and global influence.

The AfDB’s agenda should be guided by a clear principle: Africa First, but Africa Not Alone. This is not a retreat into protectionism but a recalibration of priorities. It is about asserting Africa’s agency in a world where economic blocs are hardening, supply chains are being reconfigured, and the Bretton Woods institutions face mounting criticism for their failure to adequately serve the Global South.

Crucially, this agenda must embrace a whole-of-Africa approach, fully integrating North Africa into continental economic strategies. For too long, North Africa has been treated as geopolitically distinct, often viewed through the lens of the Middle East or Mediterranean relations rather than as an integral part of Africa’s development story. The AfDB must do more to break this artificial divide and foster a more unified African economic agenda that includes both sub-Saharan and North African economies.

Moreover, the changing leadership at the AfDB in May 2025 presents an opportunity for institutional renewal, professionalization, and a departure from the past inertia that has often slowed the bank’s ability to act decisively. With a new president set to take office, Africa’s premier development finance institution must pivot toward a more strategic and results-driven approach.

Africa’s Window of Opportunity in a Fractured Global Economy

Africa’s economic trajectory is being shaped by a world undergoing deglobalization, friendshoring, and heightened geopolitical competition. The weakening of multilateral trade regimes and the rise of regional economic blocs have created both risks and opportunities for the continent.

- China’s evolving engagement: While China remains Africa’s largest bilateral lender and infrastructure partner, Beijing’s slowing economy and recalibration of its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) require Africa to rethink its dependence on Chinese capital.

- The U.S. and EU’s re-engagement: The West is stepping up efforts to counter Chinese and Russian influence in Africa, particularly in energy, minerals, and security cooperation. The U.S. Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) and the EU’s Global Gateway initiative offer new investment pathways, but Africa must shape the terms of engagement.

- BRICS+ and South-South cooperation: The expansion of BRICS+ (including Egypt and Ethiopia) presents Africa with an alternative framework for economic cooperation, challenging the dominance of Western-led financial institutions.

- Geopolitical commodity realignment: Africa’s critical minerals (cobalt, lithium, rare earths) are now at the center of global supply chain wars. The continent must leverage its resources strategically rather than surrender them to raw material extraction models.

With this backdrop, the AfDB cannot afford to be a status quo institution. It must transform into a proactive economic architect for the continent.

A Strategic Pivot: From Lender to Architect of African Economic Sovereignty

The AfDB must go beyond traditional lending and position itself as a geopolitical and geoeconomic actor that shapes Africa’s development trajectory on its own terms. This requires a three-pronged approach:

1- Reshaping Africa’s Financial Architecture: A New Deal for Capital Mobilization

Africa’s financing gap for infrastructure, energy, and industrialization remains a staggering $100–$170 billion per year. Yet, the continent remains at the mercy of foreign debt markets, where borrowing costs are significantly higher than in other emerging regions. The AfDB must spearhead a bold shift in Africa’s financial architecture.

- Expanding Africa’s alternative financial institutions: The AfDB should accelerate the development of an African Credit Rating Agency to counterbalance the unfair risk premiums imposed by Western agencies. Additionally, it should lead efforts to operationalize an African Monetary Fund (AMF) that offers counter-cyclical lending, reducing reliance on the IMF’s often punitive conditionalities.

- Pushing for SDR reallocation and new capital mechanisms: While Western economies have pledged to reallocate Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) to Africa, the process remains slow and insufficient. The AfDB must lead a coalition of African finance ministers to demand a greater and more direct reallocation, alongside the establishment of an Africa-focused liquidity fund.

- Unlocking pension funds and sovereign wealth capital: With an estimated $2 trillion in African pension and sovereign wealth funds, the AfDB should develop mechanisms to channel these resources into infrastructure and green energy investments rather than letting them sit in Western financial institutions earning minimal returns.

2- Industrialization and Energy Sovereignty: Beyond Resource Extraction

Africa cannot repeat the mistakes of the past—remaining a supplier of raw materials while importing finished goods. The AfDB must drive a new industrialization paradigm that prioritizes local value addition and economic complexity.

- Building strategic mineral refining and processing hubs: Instead of exporting raw lithium, cobalt, or rare earths, Africa must develop regional industrial corridors that process these minerals domestically. The AfDB should provide concessional financing to governments and private sector actors that commit to in-continent beneficiation.

- Expanding energy sovereignty through renewables and gas: Africa cannot industrialize without energy. The AfDB should support a dual-track approach—accelerating renewable energy deployment while ensuring natural gas remains a transitional fuel. The West’s push to cut financing for African gas projects must be countered with a firm African-led energy strategy.

- Strengthening intra-African supply chains: The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) offers a historic opportunity to boost intra-African trade. The AfDB must finance industrial clusters and transport corridors that enhance connectivity, reducing the current reliance on external markets.

3- A Whole-of-Africa Agenda: Integrating North Africa into the Strategy

North Africa has often been treated as separate from Africa’s broader economic agenda, yet it is home to some of the continent’s largest economies and plays a key role in regional stability. The AfDB must break this artificial divide and promote an inclusive development strategy.

- Bridging infrastructure gaps between North and sub-Saharan Africa: The bank should support greater transport and energy connectivity across the Sahara, integrating supply chains between regions.

- Leveraging North Africa’s financial and industrial base: Countries like Egypt, Morocco, and Algeria have well-established industrial and financial sectors that could serve as hubs for broader African industrialization.

- Facilitating South-South investment: North African capital and expertise should be encouraged to invest in sub-Saharan economies, particularly in energy, logistics, and manufacturing.

4- Rethinking Fragility: A Resilience-First Approach

With over 400 million people across 26 African countries affected by conflict, economic resilience is unattainable without addressing fragility. The AfDB must shift from reactive crisis management to a resilience-first strategy that integrates peacebuilding, economic diversification, and institutional strengthening.

Beyond Crisis Response

Conflict resolution must go beyond immediate stabilization efforts, embedding long-term, community-driven peacebuilding mechanisms that preempt instability rather than merely containing it.

From Dependency to Economic Transformation

Fragile states must transition from reliance on extractive industries to diversified, sustainable economies. Strategic investment in resilient sectors will foster self-sufficiency and reduce vulnerability to external shocks.

Institutional Anchors for Stability

A robust post-crisis recovery framework requires strengthening governance structures and creating economic zones that serve as engines of regional stability and integration.

The AfDB must move beyond conventional aid-driven approaches, embedding resilience at the core of its development paradigm.

5- Changing Leadership in May 2025: A Moment for Institutional Renewal

The upcoming leadership change at the African Development Bank (AfDB) presents a critical opportunity to restore credibility, improve governance, and enhance operational agility.

Decentralization for Efficiency

The AfDB’s centralized structure has often led to bureaucratic inertia, slow approvals, and rigid project design. Establishing autonomous regional hubs in Nairobi, Abidjan, Pretoria, and a North African center—Cairo or Casablanca—would:

- Accelerate decision-making and approvals for critical projects.

- Adapt policies to regional economic realities, improving efficiency.

- Deepen engagement with local governments, businesses, and civil society for stronger stakeholder ownership.

Breaking the Cycle of Patronage

For the AfDB to be a world-class institution, leadership must be apolitical, meritocratic, and results-driven. This requires:

- A competitive, transparent recruitment process for senior roles.

- Attracting top African talent from international organizations, academia, and the private sector.

- Embedding data-driven leadership that prioritizes impact over politics.

Reducing Donor Dependence

The bank must shift beyond reliance on external donors by mobilizing African capital and diversifying funding sources, reinforcing its role as a credible financial institution for the continent’s future.

Conclusion: A Decisive Moment for Africa’s Development Bank

The African Development Bank stands at a defining moment. It can choose to remain a conventional development financier, constrained by donor politics and incremental reforms, or it can embrace a bold, transformative role that reshapes Africa’s economic trajectory.

A ‘business as usual’ approach is no longer an option. With global power dynamics shifting and Africa’s economic weight rising, the AfDB must champion a new vision—one that prioritizes Africa First, but Africa Not Alone.

By reshaping the continent’s financial architecture, driving industrialization, integrating North Africa into the strategy, and leveraging its leadership transition to professionalize its operations, the AfDB can turn this moment of global fracture into an era of African resurgence.

The question is no longer whether Africa can rise, but whether its institutions are prepared to lead. May 2025 will be the test.

 

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    August 18, 2023
    Industrial history was written on Monday, May 15, 2023. Mohammed VI, the king of Morocco, celebrated in the Royal Palace a car from Neo Motors, the first ‘Made in Morocco’ car brand, helping drive the nation towards economic prosperity and social stability. Neo Motors vehicles, financed and built by Moroccan entrepreneurs, will soon compete globally with German, Italian, Japanese and Korean cars. The ‘Neon’ (offered for an estimated 170,000 dirhams, or $15,000) will be assembled and ...
  • Authors
    August 17, 2023
    Défis et opportunités économiques en Afrique : Renforcer la stabilité financière pour un développement durable L’Afrique est un continent qui connaît de nombreux défis économiques et sociaux, mais aussi de grandes opportunités de développement. Pour réaliser son potentiel, le continent a besoin de renforcer sa stabilité financière, c’est-à-dire sa capacité à faire face aux chocs internes et externes qui peuvent affecter sa croissance et son développement. (Figure 1) La stabilité f ...
  • August 16, 2023
    L’amélioration de la qualité des apprentissages constitue un défi majeur pour le système éducatif marocain, qui, d'après de nombreuses évaluations qualitatives et quantitatives, se positionne parmi les moins performants en termes de compétences scolaires. Les résultats des tests internationaux tels que TIMSS et PIRLS mettent en évidence des scores préoccupants en mathématiques, sciences et lecture, démontrant que plus de 40 % des élèves ne parviennent pas à atteindre ...
  • August 2, 2023
    China is the largest developing country. Africa is the continent with the largest number of developing countries. The China-Africa economic relationship has developed rapidly over the last two decades. China has increased its investment in Africa over the last four decades. Flows surged from $75 million (2003) to $5 billion (2021). This has had both positive and negative impacts on Africa. Infrastructure improvement, job creation, and overall economic growth can be listed as positiv ...
  • Authors
    Inácio F. Araújo
    Chaimaa Chawki
    Rachida El-Mansouma
    Marouane Masnaoui
    August 1, 2023
    This Paper was originally published on sciencedirect.com   The closing of Samir's Mohammedia refinery in August 2015 due to financial constraints has dramatically affected the fuel oil market in Morocco. In this paper, we assess the economic and environmental impacts of the disruption of Morocco's only refinery activities. We can isolate the oil refinery sector associated with Samir in a fully specified interregional input-output database, considering 20 industries in 12 Moroccan ...
  • July 20, 2023
    Artificial intelligence (AI) is playing an increasingly important role in our daily lives. Having experienced considerable growth in recent years, artificial intelligence corresponds to technologies capable of processing hybrid sources, particularly unstructured data. Complex tasks are thus delegated to increasingly autonomous technological processes, capable of driving economic and social development. In current African society, AI is becoming more popular and seeking to cover all ...
  • July 18, 2023
    Le secteur informel est une composante essentielle de l'économie marocaine, employant une large partie de la population, mais nuisant à la productivité, aux recettes fiscales de l’État et à la croissance économique à long terme. Sur la base de la définition adoptée dans cette étude et qui définit les travailleurs informels comme étant ceux qui ne sont pas couverts par les régimes contributifs de sécurité sociale de la Caisse nationale de sécurité sociale (CNSS) et d ...
  • Authors
    Zakaria Elouaourti
    July 13, 2023
    This paper was originally published on tandfonline.com   This paper explores new pathways to women's empowerment, including household structure, family support, satisfaction and self-esteem, and trust in institutions and politicians, and their impact on labor market participation, with a specific focus on gender differences. Using a microeconomic database of 7,860 individuals from North Africa and employing a Probit model, we find that gender significantly influences labor market ...
  • Authors
    Zakaria Elouaourti
    July 1, 2023
    This paper was originally published on erf.org.eg   The digital divide in the financial sector has occurred through the development of financial technologies. These latest “FinTech” refers to technological innovations that have emerged in the financial system in recent years, which are the new channels for providing financial services. These innovations have disrupted traditional financing models by making financial transactions more secure and by reducing spatiotemporal constrain ...
  • June 26, 2023
    L’amélioration de la qualité des apprentissages constitue un défi majeur pour le système éducatif marocain. D’après de nombreuses évaluations, aussi bien qualitatives que quantitatives, le Maroc se place parmi les pays les moins performants en matière de qualité des acquis scolaires. Un autre aspect des faibles réalisations du pays au niveau des tests internationaux est le poids des élèves dits « peu performants1 », et considérés comme particulièrement à risque. L’importance de ce ...