Close Menu
Xsum NewsXsum News

    Stay Updated.

    Get the latest Africa-focused business & infrastructure news and more directly to your inbox.

    What's Hot

    Mining Review Africa launches French and Portuguese versions to bridge regional digital divide

    Building South Africa’s next chapter through sustainable infrastructure

    Southern Africa Eco-Infrastructure Summit 2026 accelerates sustainable infrastructure and green real estate investment across the southern region

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Mining Review Africa launches French and Portuguese versions to bridge regional digital divide
    • Building South Africa’s next chapter through sustainable infrastructure
    • Southern Africa Eco-Infrastructure Summit 2026 accelerates sustainable infrastructure and green real estate investment across the southern region
    • Sustainable infrastructure strengthens South Africa’s future
    • Initial 11 rail operators selected for 41 routes as South Africa takes major step in opening up freight rail to private sector
    • Risk mitigation focused as SA opens rail and port networks to private participants
    • AIHS partners with Federal Department of Housing and Urban Development at 18th Housing Show
    • AIHS mourns Raila Odinga and celebrates his work in affordable housing and urban development
    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok
    Xsum NewsXsum News
    • African Development Bank
    • Africa Finance Corporation
    • All Africa – Construction & Infrastructure
    • Africa Intelligence
    • Construct Africa
    • More
      • Mining Review Africa
      • Energy Capital Power
      • Sustainability & Climate-Resilient Infrastructure
      • Private-Sector Infrastructure Players
      • Urban Development & Housing
    Xsum NewsXsum News
    You are at:Home»African Development Bank»Mobilizing African capital for African development
    African Development Bank

    Mobilizing African capital for African development

    Xsum NewsBy Xsum NewsMarch 19, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read1 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    CAMBRIDGE – With Africa facing a $2.8 trillion financing gap by 2030 to combat climate change alone, one might think that Africa’s funding problem boils down to a lack of capital. But without Africa’s fragmented investment landscape, this and other funding gaps could have been covered by hundreds of billions of dollars managed by institutional investors in Africa and trillions of dollars seeking yield around the world. Freeing up this capital requires a shift from simple financing models to highly leveraged models.

    Most development financial institutions are designed primarily as lenders, processing projects, disbursing loans, and measuring success in terms of capital invested. This model remains essential. However, this alone is not enough to meet Africa’s development needs. For Africa to attract the capital it needs, it must be able to offer structured, repeatable and risk-adjusted opportunities to investors.

    But with investment projects often bespoke, funding pipelines opaque, documentation inconsistent and exit routes unclear, global investors are evaluating opportunities as one-off bets. Furthermore, domestic institutional investors, constrained by excessive regulation and shallow markets, often direct their savings into short-term sovereign debt rather than long-term productive assets. And after a decade of rising borrowing costs, the government can’t recover by borrowing more.

    Development banks must start thinking less like balance sheet lenders and more like “capital architects” operating across three interrelated areas, including global capital. Standardized co-investment platforms, transparent macroeconomic and sectoral dashboards, first-loss products introduced with fiscal discipline, and predictable engagement mechanisms can transform perceived risks into measurable and priceable risks.

    Only such changes will provide the structural continuity that investor confidence demands. This will attract global sovereign wealth funds, pension funds, asset managers and climate change agencies looking for long-term exposure.

    The second area is domestic institutional capital. African pension funds and insurance companies collectively hold large amounts of long-term savings, but poor regulatory design, shallow markets, and a lack of appropriate instruments make it difficult to invest these funds productively domestically. Development banks should help African countries design infrastructure funds subject to local prudential rules, green bond pipelines denominated in local currencies, securitized SME portfolios, and blended finance vehicles that bring together domestic investors with international partners.

    Nigeria Infrastructure Credit offers a glimpse of what is possible, offering local currency credit guarantees to increase the attractiveness of bonds issued to finance local infrastructure projects. Such initiatives do more than simply mobilize private capital. Financial sovereignty will also be strengthened, with lasting, long-term benefits such as reduced dependence on external financing cycles, deepened domestic capital markets, and increased ability to price and absorb Africa’s risks without relying on foreign intermediaries.

    Success in these areas will largely depend on advances in the third area: investment platforms. Investors don’t want to create a new framework for each project. Instead, they want to replicate existing structures such as energy transition programs, standardized public-private partnership models, regional infrastructure vehicles, industrial clusters, and sector-specific financing platforms that can absorb large-scale capital.

    Once you receive financing for a solar power generation facility, it is a contract. The architecture is a standardized energy platform that combines domestic pension obligations, development bank guarantees, and global equity participation across multiple projects. The difference between trading and markets is reproducibility.

    However, the strength of a structure is determined by its fundamentals, and all three areas of global, domestic, and platform-based capital are ultimately anchored in sovereign risk. Sovereign spreads determine the cost of corporate and infrastructure finance, and fiscal credibility determines sovereign spreads. Pretending otherwise risks relocating rather than reducing vulnerability.

    Development banks must therefore move beyond their role as capital architects and become macrostrategists, building a single framework to support macroeconomic monitoring, debt sustainability analysis, and coordination of capital structure design. Guarantees and mixed instruments must be evaluated in parallel with sovereign contingent liabilities. Project-level solutions must be designed to avoid compromising financial resilience. Macroeconomic policy and capital mobilization must operate in parallel, rather than in silos.

    Operationally, this means translating country and regional economic analysis into intelligence for investors: forward-looking risk assessments, scenario analysis, and policy tracking tools that illuminate Africa’s risk and return dynamics over time. It also means institutionalizing an investor engagement platform that brings together policymakers, regulators, domestic asset owners and global capital. And that means measuring performance not only by spending, but also by catalytic leverage: how many dollars of external capital are mobilized for every development bank capital injection.

    It is now clear that Africa cannot rely on externally funded public investments to meet its development needs. Official development assistance is expected to decline by more than 7% in 2024 and continue to decline. Bilateral aid is also shrinking, and China’s infrastructure financing is slowing. Meanwhile, demographic and climate pressures in Africa are increasing.

    Fortunately, alternative funding sources abound. Africa’s savings pool is expanding. Pension funds around the world are reallocating their portfolios. Gulf sovereign wealth funds are expanding. Climate financial institutions are looking for reliable pipelines. With the right architecture, Africa can effectively attract and deploy this capital. Development banks should lead the way in its construction.

    Gómez Agou, former permanent representative of the International Monetary Fund in Gabon from 2021 to 2025, is a fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School. This article was distributed by Project Syndicate.

    African capital Development mobilizing
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleInternational Islamic Trade Finance Corporation (ITFC) and Trade Development Bank Group (TDB Group) celebrate strengthening partnership with new initiative
    Next Article Gulf shipping shock makes Africa’s dependence on fertilizer a food security risk
    Xsum News
    • Website

    Related Posts

    AIHS partners with Federal Department of Housing and Urban Development at 18th Housing Show

    April 8, 2026

    AIHS mourns Raila Odinga and celebrates his work in affordable housing and urban development

    April 3, 2026

    South Africa signs landmark agreement to boost housing development in Africa

    March 28, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    African Development Bank Group and Nedbank Group sign multi-billion rand funding partnership to transform housing access and boost African trade

    December 19, 202529 Views

    A United Continent on the Move: Ambassador Kouyateh’s Call for an African Logistics Renaissance

    November 20, 202529 Views

    Eni secures multi-million dollar loan for African FLNG project

    January 26, 202622 Views

    African Development Fund and WHO collaborate to save Sudan’s health system

    November 17, 202522 Views
    Don't Miss
    Mining Review Africa April 17, 2026

    Mining Review Africa launches French and Portuguese versions to bridge regional digital divide

    670 VUKA Group’s flagship publication, Mining Review Africa, this week launched a French and Portuguese…

    Building South Africa’s next chapter through sustainable infrastructure

    Southern Africa Eco-Infrastructure Summit 2026 accelerates sustainable infrastructure and green real estate investment across the southern region

    Sustainable infrastructure strengthens South Africa’s future

    Stay In Touch
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • LinkedIn
    • TikTok

    Stay Updated.

    Get the latest Africa-focused business & infrastructure news and more directly to your inbox.

    About Us
    About Us

    Xsum News is Africa’s digital window into the future of business. We tell stories of innovation, enterprise, and investment that are shaping the continent’s economic rise. African Business, Added Up.

    X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn TikTok
    Our Picks

    Mining Review Africa launches French and Portuguese versions to bridge regional digital divide

    Building South Africa’s next chapter through sustainable infrastructure

    Southern Africa Eco-Infrastructure Summit 2026 accelerates sustainable infrastructure and green real estate investment across the southern region

    Most Popular

    African Development Bank praises Algeria’s development model, aims to replicate its success across the continent

    Considering the redefinition of African capital by UBA and Arauba

    G20 Energy Investment Forum brings together Africa’s top finance, insurance and technology leaders

    © 2026 Xsum News. All Rights Reserved.
    • 🌍 About Xsum News
    • 📬 Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.