Africa’s growing capital base, now estimated at over $4tn, is failing to translate into large-scale job creation and industrial growth due to poor allocation and weak financial intermediation, a new report by the Africa Finance Corporation has revealed.
The 2026 State of Africa’s Infrastructure report, titled “The Africa We Build: From Capital to Systems,” warned that despite significant expansion in domestic financial resources across banks, pension funds, insurance pools, and sovereign institutions, the continent continues to struggle with unemployment, weak industrialisation, and infrastructure gaps.
It raised concerns over Africa’s economic trajectory, noting that despite a rapidly expanding capital base exceeding $4tn, the continent is still struggling to generate jobs at the scale required to support its growing population.
The Corporation said the disconnect between capital availability and real economic impact remains one of Africa’s most pressing challenges, stressing that funds within banks, pension assets, insurance pools, and sovereign institutions have not translated into meaningful industrialisation or employment growth.
The report read, “Capital is accumulating across Africa, but it is not creating jobs at scale. That is the disconnect we must fix. Across the continent, domestic financial resources have expanded significantly within banks, pension funds, insurance pools, and sovereign institutions—now exceeding $4tn. Yet this growing capital base has not translated into the level of industrialisation, infrastructure, or employment required to support sustained economic transformation.
“The consequences are structural. Africa continues to export raw materials and import finished goods, exporting jobs embedded in value chains while importing inflation embedded in products. At the same time, a rapidly expanding working-age population is entering the labour market each year with expectations that current economic structures are not yet equipped to meet.
“This is not due to an absence of capital or resources. It is a failure of alignment. Capital exists. Resources exist. Markets exist. But they are not connected in ways that create productive capacity, industrial depth, and sustained employment. The question, therefore, is no longer whether Africa can finance its development. It is whether Africa can organise its capital and put in place effective intermediation of the scope and speed required to build economies that generate jobs consistently.”
President and Chief Executive Officer of AFC, Samaila Zubairu, said the core challenge is no longer access to capital, but how it is deployed. “Capital is accumulating across Africa, but it is not creating jobs at scale. That is the disconnect we must fix,” he said.
According to the report, Africa’s financial systems have expanded substantially, yet this capital has not been channelled into productive sectors capable of driving economic transformation.
“Across the continent, domestic financial resources have expanded significantly. Yet this growing capital base has not translated into the level of industrialisation, infrastructure, or employment required,” Zubairu stated.
He added that the implications of this imbalance are structural and far-reaching, noting that Africa continues to export raw materials while importing finished goods, effectively exporting jobs embedded in value chains and importing inflation through manufactured products.
“The consequences are structural,” Zubairu stated. “Africa continues to export raw materials and import finished goods, exporting jobs embedded in value chains while importing inflation embedded in products. At the same time, a rapidly expanding working-age population is entering the labour market each year with expectations that current economic structures are not yet equipped to meet.”
The report argued that the challenge is no longer about access to finance, but rather how capital is organised and deployed, stressing that Africa’s binding constraint has shifted from capital availability to capital allocation and intermediation at scale.
“This is not due to an absence of capital or resources. It is a failure of alignment. Capital exists. Resources exist. Markets exist. But they are not connected in ways that create productive capacity, industrial depth, and sustained employment,” he said.
According to the AFC, financial systems across the continent still prioritise low-risk, short-term investments such as sovereign securities, leaving long-term capital circulating within financial markets without reaching productive sectors like infrastructure and industry.
“Capital is present, but it is not being deployed in ways that transform economies,” Zubairu noted. “The question is no longer whether Africa can finance its development. It is whether Africa can organise its capital and put in place effective intermediation at the scale and speed required to build economies that generate jobs consistently.”
The Corporation further warned that reliance on external financing is becoming increasingly unreliable, with concessional funding declining and access to international capital markets growing more volatile.
“External financing into Africa is declining in both scale and reliability,” the report stated. “Official development assistance has already begun to reverse from its peak, while access to international bond markets has become increasingly episodic. These dynamics underscore a structural reality: Africa must increasingly rely on its own capital base, with external capital playing a complementary role.”
On infrastructure, the AFC emphasised that fragmented systems across transport corridors and resource value chains are limiting economic efficiency, despite the presence of physical assets such as roads, ports, and rail networks.
“Infrastructure must be approached not as a series of discrete projects, but as integrated systems that link energy, transport, and industry to markets,” Zubairu said. “Across major corridors, the constraint is not the absence of infrastructure assets, but the fragmentation between them.”
He added that Africa’s resource wealth remains underutilised due to weak value addition, stressing that the continent is not resource-constrained but value-capture constrained.
“Africa is not resource-constrained. It is value-capture constrained,” he said. “This has resulted in a persistent model in which raw materials are exported while higher-value processing and manufacturing take place elsewhere.”
The AFC boss called for a strategic shift from extraction to transformation, urging governments and investors to align infrastructure, resources, and markets to unlock industrial growth and job creation.
“Capital must be anchored in production. Infrastructure must enable value chains. Growth must translate into jobs,” he said. “For too long, value has left the continent in raw form, only to return at a premium. That cycle must be broken.”
He stressed that time is of the essence, warning that Africa’s demographic window presents both an opportunity and a risk if not properly harnessed.
“Africa stands at a defining moment,” Zubairu said. “Its capital base is substantial, its resource endowment is well established, and its demographic trajectory provides a time-bound opportunity. What is required now is disciplined execution at scale, with urgency, and with purpose.”
The report emphasised that sectors such as steel, fertiliser, refining, and aluminium could significantly boost industrialisation if supported by reliable energy, efficient logistics, and strong market linkages.
Zubairu said, “Delivering this transformation requires more than capital; it requires effective intermediation. Financial instruments must be structured to meet institutional investor needs, and risks must be managed through guarantees and blended finance.”
While acknowledging ongoing reforms across several African countries, the AFC said progress remains uneven and too slow relative to the scale of available capital. “Time is a critical factor. Africa’s demographic growth presents a window of opportunity, but the cost of delayed action will increase materially,” the report warned.
Zubairu added that AFC would continue to play a catalytic role in bridging the gap between capital and development outcomes. “Our focus is on building integrated infrastructure systems that link resources to markets, enabling industrialisation and job creation at scale,” he said.
The report concluded that strengthening financial intermediation frameworks, expanding investable pipelines, and mobilising domestic institutional capital will be critical to translating Africa’s economic potential into sustained growth, industrialisation, and job creation.
The Africa Finance Corporation was established to mobilise infrastructure financing and support economic development across the continent. In recent years, African economies have recorded steady growth in domestic capital pools, including pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and central bank reserves.
However, experts say weak financial intermediation, limited project pipelines, and structural inefficiencies have prevented these funds from being effectively deployed into infrastructure and industrial development. The AFC report argued that addressing these gaps is critical to unlocking Africa’s economic potential and positioning the continent as a major driver of global growth.
