Africa’s Economic Future: Growth Or More Stagnation?

AFRICA is on the brink of a demographic transformation. By 2030, over half of the world’s young workforce will be African. The continent’s share of the global population is rising dramatically—from 9 percent  in 1950 to a projected 21 percent in the next decade. This youthful workforce should be Africa’s greatest advantage, but economic stagnation threatens to waste this potential.

John McDermott, in his analysis for The Economist, presents a stark reality: while the world has embraced technological and economic revolutions, Africa has slipped further behind. Income per capita has fallen from a third of the global average in 2000 to just a quarter today. Key economies, such as Nigeria and South Africa, have failed to drive regional prosperity.

To reverse this trend, Africa’s leaders must reject the prevailing statist orthodoxy and embrace a bold economic vision—one that fosters business growth, encourages investment, and integrates markets. Without this shift, the continent risks becoming the world’s last economic outlier, with dire consequences for its people and global stability.

The stagnation problem: why Africa is falling behind

While Africa has seen social transformations—urbanisation, technological adoption, and a cultural boom in sectors like music—it has failed to convert these changes into sustained economic growth. Unlike Asia and Latin America, which have produced corporate giants and technological hubs, Africa remains a ‘corporate desert.’ It has fewer billion-dollar companies than any other region, and its fragmented markets deter global investors.

Several key issues underpin this stagnation:

  1. Lack of productivity growth
    Africa’s transition from agrarian societies to urban centres has not been accompanied by industrial revolutions or productivity surges. Unlike China and India, where urbanisation fuelled economic expansion, Africa’s services sector remains inefficient. McDermott notes that its productivity levels are barely above where they were in 2010.
  2. Infrastructure deficits
    Despite discussions about digital technology and renewable energy, Africa lacks the basic infrastructure needed for economic take-off. Road density has declined, irrigation remains scarce (less than 4 percent of farmland is irrigated), and nearly half of sub-Saharan Africa lacks electricity. Without these fundamental developments, industrialisation remains out of reach.
  3. Fragmented markets and weak investment climate
    Africa accounts for 3 percent of global GDP but attracts less than 1 percent of private investment. Its stock exchanges remain marginal in the global financial landscape. Unlike India or Brazil, which have fostered thriving corporate ecosystems, Africa’s regulatory barriers and lack of economic integration stifle business expansion.

These issues underscore a broader truth: Africa is undergoing disruption without development. Cities are growing, but without the economic engines to sustain them, leading to rising unemployment and social unrest.

Breaking the cycle: what Africa’s leaders must do

McDermott argues that Africa’s leaders must reject failed economic policies and adopt a bold new approach—one driven by free markets, private investment, and regional integration. This requires a fundamental shift in mindset and governance.

  1. Prioritising growth over government control

For too long, African governments have favoured state-led economic policies that mirror the inefficiencies of Chinese state capitalism. While infrastructure projects funded by China have helped in some cases, a dependency on foreign investment without domestic economic dynamism is unsustainable. Leaders must move away from centralised economic planning and create an environment where businesses can thrive.

McDermott warns against a dangerous development narrative that prioritises aid-based interventions—such as mosquito nets and solar panels—over broad economic reform. While these initiatives are valuable, they cannot substitute for large-scale economic growth. History shows that no country has eliminated poverty without sustained GDP expansion.

  1. Embracing a capitalist revolution

Africa’s economic stagnation is, at its core, a failure of capitalism. Unlike East Asia, where economic liberalisation unleashed a wave of prosperity, Africa remains bound by outdated economic structures. McDermott points to a few exceptions—Botswana, Ethiopia, and Mauritius—where governments have successfully struck ‘development bargains,’ prioritising national economic growth over short-term political gains. More countries need to follow suit.

A cultural shift is also necessary. In many African societies, government jobs remain more desirable than entrepreneurial ventures. Yet, it is business and innovation—not state employment—that drive economic prosperity. Africa needs more risk-taking business leaders who can scale enterprises beyond national borders.

  1. Regional integration: unlocking market potential

One of Africa’s greatest economic handicaps is its fractured markets. Unlike Europe or Asia, where regional trade agreements have enabled businesses to expand, Africa remains balkanised. The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) has the potential to change this, but progress has been slow.

McDermott emphasises that true integration requires more than trade agreements. It demands:

  • Visa-free travel across African countries
  • A unified capital market to attract global investors
  • Cross-border digital and data networks to streamline commerce

Without these changes, African businesses will struggle to reach the scale necessary for global competitiveness.

The cost of inaction: a worsening crisis

Failing to address these economic challenges will have devastating consequences. McDermott warns that if the ‘Africa gap’ continues to widen, the continent will house the majority of the world’s poorest populations.

This is not just a humanitarian concern—it is a geopolitical one. Africa’s growing youth population, faced with limited economic opportunities, could fuel migration crises and political instability that affect the entire world. Economic stagnation will exacerbate vulnerability to climate change, further straining resources and governance structures.

But despite these risks, McDermott remains cautiously optimistic. Africa does not need saving—it needs ambition, reform, and a commitment to free markets.

The path forward

Africa stands at a defining moment. It can continue down its current trajectory—marked by stagnation, weak investment, and economic fragmentation—or it can embrace a bold, market-driven transformation.

McDermott’s analysis is clear: the choice is Africa’s to make. The continent has the talent, resources, and entrepreneurial spirit to close the Africa gap. What it needs is leadership that prioritises growth, fosters regional integration, and unleashes the power of capitalism.

The world has seen economic miracles before. Africa’s time is now.