Monday, October 27, 2025
  • Login
198 Brazil News
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • BUSINESS NEWS
  • FEATURED NEWS
    • BRAZIL USA TRADE NEWS
    • BRAZIL INDIA NEWS
    • BRAZIL NIGERIA NEWS
    • BRAZIL UK NEWS
    • BRAZIL EU NEWS
    • BRAZIL RUSSIA NEWS
    • BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS
    • BRAZIL GULF NATIONS NEWS
  • POLITICAL NEWS
  • MORE NEWS
    • BRAZIL CEO NETWORKS
    • BRAZIL CRYPTO NEWS
    • BRAZIL IMMIGRATION NEWS
    • BRAZIL TECHNOLOGY NEWS
    • BRAZIL MANUFACTURERS
    • BRAZIL JOINT VENTURE NEWS
    • BRAZIL AGRICULTURE NEWS
    • BRAZIL UNIVERSITIES
    • BRAZIL VENTURE CAPITAL NEWS
    • BRAZIL PARTNERSHIP NEWS
    • BRAZIL BUSINESS HELP
    • BRAZIL EDUCATION NEWS
  • ASK IKE LEMUWA
  • Contact us
  • Home
  • BUSINESS NEWS
  • FEATURED NEWS
    • BRAZIL USA TRADE NEWS
    • BRAZIL INDIA NEWS
    • BRAZIL NIGERIA NEWS
    • BRAZIL UK NEWS
    • BRAZIL EU NEWS
    • BRAZIL RUSSIA NEWS
    • BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS
    • BRAZIL GULF NATIONS NEWS
  • POLITICAL NEWS
  • MORE NEWS
    • BRAZIL CEO NETWORKS
    • BRAZIL CRYPTO NEWS
    • BRAZIL IMMIGRATION NEWS
    • BRAZIL TECHNOLOGY NEWS
    • BRAZIL MANUFACTURERS
    • BRAZIL JOINT VENTURE NEWS
    • BRAZIL AGRICULTURE NEWS
    • BRAZIL UNIVERSITIES
    • BRAZIL VENTURE CAPITAL NEWS
    • BRAZIL PARTNERSHIP NEWS
    • BRAZIL BUSINESS HELP
    • BRAZIL EDUCATION NEWS
  • ASK IKE LEMUWA
  • Contact us
No Result
View All Result
198 Brazil News
No Result
View All Result
Home BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS

Africa: The Rising Stakes of Foreign Investment in Africa

by Gias
September 2, 2025
in BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
0
Africa: The Rising Stakes of Foreign Investment in Africa
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


With labour’s contribution to economic growth steadily growing, Africa must focus on improving inward financial flows.

In the early stages of development, economic growth is largely driven by the contribution of labour. After that, capital and eventually technology increase in relative importance. This happened with the Asian Tigers and China when they were poor, reflecting the progression in growth drivers as countries move towards prosperity.

For its 2025/26 financial year, the World Bank considers 22 African countries to be low-income, with a gross national income (GNI) per person equivalent to or below US$1 145. Economic growth in these countries essentially comes from their better-educated, healthier and employed labour force.

Then, as countries develop and enter middle-income status, the availability and role of capital to boost manufacturing begin dominating, eventually becoming more important for economic growth than labour or technology. That generally applies to the 23 African countries the World Bank considers lower-middle-income.


Keep up with the latest headlines on WhatsApp | LinkedIn

Fast forward, as countries settle into upper-middle-income status (Africa has eight) and try to achieve sufficient velocity to become high-income. At this stage, the role of technology in enhancing high-value service output starts dominating.

Only Seychelles has escaped Africa’s notorious middle-income trap. Inadequate access to capital for manufacturing and technology advancement largely explains lower-middle- and upper-middle-income countries’ inability to escape the trap.

Access to capital is vital for development. It enables countries to invest in health, infrastructure and education, diversify from commodities, and pursue a manufacturing-led growth path for sustained and rapid growth.

So, attracting foreign direct investment (FDI) at scale becomes crucial. To this end, governments compete with one another on tax incentives, Special Economic Zones, regulatory incentives, infrastructure development and governance reforms.

With above-average FDI, countries like Senegal, Uganda, Rwanda, Niger, Djibouti, Togo, Ethiopia, Benin and Côte d’Ivoire are projected to grow at rates exceeding 6% – above global averages. In 2025, these are among the world’s fastest-growing economies.

Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, is however expected to grow at only 3.2% in 2025. With an annual population increase of 2.6%, its income per capita remains stagnant. In addition to poor governance and insecurity, its notorious low levels of FDI (around 0.5% of GDP) are an important driver of lacklustre growth.

Other African countries are struggling, including Equatorial Guinea, South Africa, Tunisia, Lesotho, Gabon, Angola, and the Central African Republic. All are growing slowly, and except for Gabon, have low or negative FDI inflows. Gabon attracts modest investment to its oil and gas sector despite the 2023 coup and subsequent instability.

Gabon reflects the history of most FDI to Africa, which has been in oil and gas, such as in Mozambique, Tanzania, Uganda and Namibia. These inflows have limited forward and backward linkages to other sectors like agriculture and manufacturing.

Once fossil fuels investments are excluded, it’s clear that most FDI flows to upper-middle-income African countries, which is why development-oriented aid is so important for low- and lower-middle-income Africa. USAID provided around 26% of aid to Africa, and its dissolution has increased the significance of FDI, remittances and better domestic revenue mobilisation.

Much can be done to improve domestic revenue generation, particularly through technology. Yet, Africa’s average tax-to-GDP ratio is only 16% (with a large spread when comparing rates per country), compared to 19.1% in Asia-Pacific, 21.5% in Latin America and the Caribbean, and 34% across Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development nations.

Using the International Futures forecasting platform, African Futures’ updated Financial Flows theme examines the effect on Africa of increased FDI, remittances and aid in a post-Donald Trump world, compared to a business-as-usual forecast.

In 2023, FDI inflows represented 3% of gross domestic product (GDP). The business-as-usual forecast shows a modest increase to 3.6% of GDP by 2043 as Africa’s population and market growth steadily attract more investment. Under the Financial Flows scenario, inward FDI is modelled to increase more aggressively to 5.3% of GDP (US$351 billion vs US$230 billion).

Although inflows in the Financial Flows scenario are much larger, Africa’s stock of FDI in 2043 is still significantly below that of South America in absolute terms, and slightly less than half if expressed as a percentage of GDP.

In this scenario, Africa’s GDP would be US$243.5 billion larger in 2043 than the business-as-usual forecast. Average GDP per capita would increase by US$160, with Seychelles and several upper-middle- and lower-middle-income countries doing exceptionally well.

Among the types of inward financial flows modelled, FDI outperforms aid and remittances in improving productivity, especially in countries with skilled labour, strong institutions and deeper financial markets. Because FDI generally advantages skilled labour, its impact on extreme poverty in the Financial Flows scenario is limited to a one percentage point decline below the business-as-usual forecast.

Upper-middle-income countries simply gain more from FDI than poorer African countries. Furthermore, most FDI in Africa still goes to extractives such as minerals, gas and oil, although that is changing.

However, the African Continental Free Trade Area’s (AfCFTA) full implementation generally does best when comparing the various sectors modelled on the African Futures website. Except for aid, positive signs on larger inward financial flows abound.

Intra-African investment is rising, especially from Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa, in areas such as IT, finance and manufacturing. This trend will likely accelerate with the AfCFTA’s implementation, which the World Bank suggests could boost FDI by up to 120%, with intra-African investment also rising by about 85%.

Sign up for free AllAfrica Newsletters

Get the latest in African news delivered straight to your inbox


Success!

Almost finished…

We need to confirm your email address.

To complete the process, please follow the instructions in the email we just sent you.


Error!

There was a problem processing your submission. Please try again later.

Emerging economies like China, the Gulf states and India are all growing their investments in Africa’s energy, infrastructure and logistics, reshaping the continent’s economic and geopolitical landscape.

As global competition intensifies, African countries can increasingly negotiate investment terms that serve their long-term goals. Investment in agro-processing, renewable energies, manufacturing and digital infrastructure tends to enable technology transfer, generate more jobs and build economic resilience.

African governments must improve conditions to absorb and retain capital by offering a favourable investment climate, policy stability, and ease of doing business. Investments should align with national priorities and structural transformation goals, following the East Asian example of leveraging FDI for technological upgrading and industrialisation. Countries like Egypt, Senegal, Morocco, Ethiopia, and Zambia are doing well, but many are still struggling.

FDI can be a powerful tool when managed strategically and in tandem with robust domestic reform.

Africa’s development trajectory is both promising and precarious. With the contribution of labour to economic growth steadily improving, Africans should mobilise more inward financial flows, particularly FDI. At the same time, they should reduce the costs of remittances and lobby for aid to poor countries, which typically struggle to attract FDI.

This article was first published in Africa Tomorrow, the blog of the ISS’ African Futures and Innovation programme.

Jakkie Cilliers, Head, African Futures and Innovation, ISS Pretoria



Source link

Tags: AfricaForeigninvestmentRisingstakes
Previous Post

Gaza flotilla carrying Greta Thunberg sets sail for 2nd time after storm delay

Next Post

Warren Buffett `disappointed’ with Kraft Heinz split – report (KHC:NASDAQ)

Related Posts

Top 10 African Countries by Active Military Manpower 2025
BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS

Top 10 African Countries by Active Military Manpower 2025

by Gias
October 25, 2025
Africa: Climate Science and Early Warnings Key to Saving Lives
BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS

Africa: Climate Science and Early Warnings Key to Saving Lives

by Gias
October 24, 2025
Africa: Cancer Drug Quality in Africa Is a Worry – What We Found in a 4-Country Study
BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS

Africa: Cancer Drug Quality in Africa Is a Worry – What We Found in a 4-Country Study

by Gias
October 23, 2025
Africa: Indigenous Voices Must Be Central At COP30, Says the Archbishop of Brazil
BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS

Africa: Indigenous Voices Must Be Central At COP30, Says the Archbishop of Brazil

by Gias
October 22, 2025
Africa: Decade of Slowing Deforestation Offers Hope for Forests
BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS

Africa: Decade of Slowing Deforestation Offers Hope for Forests

by Gias
October 22, 2025
Next Post
Warren Buffett `disappointed’ with Kraft Heinz split – report (KHC:NASDAQ)

Warren Buffett `disappointed' with Kraft Heinz split - report (KHC:NASDAQ)

France says EU leaders, not ministers, should decide 2040 climate target – POLITICO

France says EU leaders, not ministers, should decide 2040 climate target – POLITICO

No Result
View All Result

Recent Posts

  • BRICS, India, And China’s Digital Renminbi: Is De-Dollarisation Finally Becoming A Reality? — Explained | India News
  • Rare earth mining expands into Laos, threatening entire Mekong River
  • US and China agree ‘framework’ for trade deal ahead of Xi-Trump meeting | Donald Trump
  • India Extends Its Crypto Reign but US Isn’t Far Behind With Explosive 50% Volume Growth
  • Argentina votes in midterm elections set to test Milei’s mandate, US support

Categories

  • BRAZIL AFRICA NEWS
  • BRAZIL AGRICULTURE NEWS
  • BRAZIL BUSINESS HELP
  • BRAZIL CRYPTO NEWS
  • BRAZIL EDUCATION NEWS
  • BRAZIL EU NEWS
  • BRAZIL GULF NATIONS NEWS
  • BRAZIL IMMIGRATION NEWS
  • BRAZIL INDIA NEWS
  • BRAZIL JOINT VENTURE NEWS
  • BRAZIL MANUFACTURERS
  • BRAZIL NIGERIA NEWS
  • BRAZIL PARTNERSHIP NEWS
  • BRAZIL POLITICAL NEWS
  • BRAZIL RUSSIA NEWS
  • BRAZIL TECHNOLOGY NEWS
  • BRAZIL UK NEWS
  • BRAZIL UNIVERSITIES
  • BRAZIL USA TRADE NEWS
  • BRAZIL VENTURE CAPITAL NEWS
  • BUSINESS NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
  • VIDEO NEWS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
  • Home
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact us

Copyright © 2025 198 Brazil News.
All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Contact
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • Read the latest updates from Brazil
  • Terms and Conditions

Copyright © 2025 198 Brazil News.
All Rights Reserved.