Dar es Salaam. Analysts have warned that limited fiscal space and persistent governance challenges could undermine the sustainability of Africa’s development financing model, even as the African Development Bank Group (AfDB) secures a record $11 billion replenishment for its concessional arm.
The latest funding, the largest in African Development Fund (ADF) history, is a 23% increase from the previous cycle and comes at a time when donor governments in Europe and North America are cutting foreign aid amid mounting domestic fiscal pressures.
The latest supply, known as ADF-17, is seen as a milestone in Africa’s drive towards greater independence.
For the first time, 23 African countries pledged funds to the ADF, which provides funding to the continent’s poorest economies, totaling $182.7 million (five times more than in the previous cycle). According to the AfDB, 19 countries contributed for the first time.
AfDB President Dr. Sidi Ould Tarr said this achievement was a turning point for development finance on the continent.
“In one of the most challenging global environments for development finance, our partners have chosen ambition over layoffs and investment over inertia,” he said.
The resupply has also attracted major partnerships, including up to $800 million from the Arab Economic Development Bank and up to $2 billion from the OPEC International Development Fund, signaling a shift to risk-sharing arrangements rather than grants.
But analysts say the headline numbers hide deeper structural constraints.
Dr. Tobias Swai, a financial expert at the University of Dar es Salaam (UDSM), said while strengthening the AfDB’s capital base was a welcome move, Africa’s financial needs remained far greater.
“Strengthening its financial capacity is a positive step for the Bank, but Africa’s development financing needs are huge,” he said.
Dr Swai warned that the record mobilization could increase competition for preferential loans, raising borrowing costs and restricting access even for countries with strong track records.
He also questioned whether banks would be able to maintain adequate capital buffers to meet increased demand.
“The key question is whether the Bank has enough capital to meet the needs of many African countries. Pressure on its balance sheet will only increase,” he said.
Professor Haruni Mapesa, president of the Mwalimu Nyerere Memorial Academy and an expert on finance and taxation, said the AfDB remained one of the few institutions able to provide long-term concessional financing to African governments.
“This is virtually the only window through which many African countries can access affordable financing at favorable interest rates,” he said.
However, he cautioned that sustainability ultimately depends on repayment discipline and sound governance.
“Weak governance leads to misallocation of funds, impairing repayments and weakening the financial position of banks,” Professor Mapesa said.
Despite the risks, he said the AfDB is central to Africa’s economic independence.
“For African countries, the AfDB remains the most viable path away from over-reliance on Western aid. But that path will only be sustainable if loans are used productively and repaid responsibly,” he said.
Dr Rawi Yohana, senior lecturer in economics at the Open University of Tanzania, said Africa’s efforts to finance its own development face serious structural limitations.
“Domestic financing is not easy for Africa. The revenue base of most countries is too small to sustain the scale of ongoing development projects,” he said.
Dr Yohana added that much of government revenue has been absorbed into current expenditures such as wages, debt servicing and essential social services, leaving little fiscal space for large-scale investments.
He said the success of new financing models will depend on building a strong private sector that can participate in infrastructure and industrial projects through public-private partnerships.


