Across the continent, regional integration is advancing, digital transformation is accelerating, and competition for critical minerals is intensifying.

According to the African Development Bank (AfDB), the continent is projected to grow by 4.1% in 2026, outpacing the global average of 2.7% forecast by the World Bank. Major economies will prove resilient, and distinct hotspots of growth are expected in East and West Africa, with some countries standing out as growth leaders, forecast to expand by more than 6% in 2026.

The Economist Intelligence Unit states that growth will be driven by an interlinked set of structural factors, including strategic infrastructure development, rapid urbanisation, digital transformation and technology adoption, sustained inflows of FDI, expanding regional markets, and deeper integration into global value chains.

This growth, however, must be underpinned by deeper reforms that strengthen fiscal resilience, stimulate industrial capacity, and accelerate integration.

Mobilising Africa’s Resources for Development

Africa’s path to self-reliance begins with financing its own priorities. External aid continues to decline, and access to concessional financing is tightening amid global monetary constraints. Yet the continent holds untapped financial potential, including natural capital, domestic savings, and remittances.

Brookings notes that effective domestic resource mobilisation is the cornerstone of long-term growth. As the World Bank’s Africa Pulse adds, however, this must go hand in hand with strengthening governance and public financial management to ensure that resources are used efficiently.

Countries such as Kenya and Côte d’Ivoire are pioneering green and infrastructure bonds to finance climate-resilient projects, while Ghana and Nigeria are advancing digital tax reforms to expand the fiscal base. According to the AfDB, improving tax efficiency by 1 percentage point of GDP could generate an additional USD 30 billion annually for African economies, helping significantly bridge major infrastructure gaps.

Beyond revenue, natural resource governance remains critical. Africa’s minerals and renewable energy potential can power both the green transition and industrial expansion, but only if value is added locally. By capturing more value along the production chain, African countries can transform extractive wealth into enduring prosperity.

Charting Africa’s Path to Industry-Led Growth

Industrialisation is not a new ambition, but in 2026 it carries renewed urgency. The African Union’s Agenda 2063 envisions a thriving industrial base as the bedrock of economic transformation. Yet manufacturing still contributes less than 12% of Africa’s GDP, a figure that has remained stagnant for decades.

The Foresight Africa 2026 report argues that Africa’s industrialisation must be green, inclusive, and technology-driven. Complementing this, UNCTAD’s latest Economic Development in Africa Report emphasises regional value chains, through which African countries trade intermediate goods and services with each other, reducing dependence on volatile global markets.

The success stories are emerging:

    • Ethiopia is expanding light manufacturing in textiles and leather.
    • South Africa is driving clean-energy vehicle production.
    • Morocco has become a continental hub for solar component manufacturing.
    • Kenya and Rwanda are investing in e-mobility and digital fabrication.

For this shift to scale, governments must prioritise enabling ecosystems, efficient logistics, affordable power, trade-friendly borders, and skills development. Industry-led growth will not emerge from policy statements alone but from deliberate collaboration among states, investors, and innovators.

Leveraging Technology, Trade and Integration

Africa’s next growth frontier lies at the intersection of technology, trade, and integration. The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), now the world’s largest free trade bloc by membership, has moved from rhetoric to implementation, with pilot cross-border trade shipments already underway.

According to UNECA, full implementation of the AfCFTA could lift 50 million people out of poverty by 2035 and increase intra-African trade by more than 50%. To realise this potential, digitalisation must be central. The AfCFTA Digital Trade Protocol, adopted in 2024, seeks to harmonise e-commerce regulations, digital payments, and data flows, creating a continental digital economy projected to reach USD 180 billion by 2026 (per IFC projections).

Countries are responding rapidly:

    • Nigeria and Kenya continue to lead in fintech adoption, with mobile money penetration exceeding 60%.
    • Egypt and South Africa are investing in artificial intelligence policy frameworks.
    • Rwanda is pioneering digital public infrastructure to streamline cross-border trade.

Technology not only drives efficiency, but it also deepens inclusion, connects markets, and empowers youth-led enterprises. When coupled with trade liberalisation, it positions Africa as a dynamic hub of innovation rather than merely a consumer.

Conclusion: Africa’s Decade of Determination

Africa’s story in 2026 is not one of waiting for opportunity but of creating it. As Brookings’ Foresight Africa and other analyses remind us, the continent’s future hinges on its capacity to mobilise what it already has: talent, resources, and ingenuity.

The real test lies in leadership, accountability, and collaboration. By aligning fiscal reforms with industrial ambition, investing in digital transformation, and making regional integration tangible, Africa can realise its potential.

This is not merely Africa’s moment; it is its mandate: to own its narrative, shape its growth, and lead with purpose in a changing global order.