The region is projected to expand by 7.52%, marking a notable shift in Africa’s economic story away from commodity dependence toward more diversified, domestically driven models. This regional divergence reflects deeper structural changes.
Sub-Saharan Africa’s overall growth remains steady at 4.1 percent in 2026, but the distribution is uneven. Rwanda, Ethiopia and Tanzania are expected to lead East Africa’s charge, underpinned by sustained infrastructure spending, post-shock recovery, and improving productivity in services-led economies. Meanwhile, oil exporters are lagging despite commodity gains, signalling that traditional resource wealth no longer guarantees strong performance.
West Africa is projected to deliver the second-strongest performance, with economic expansion averaging 5.47% in 2026, driven by macroeconomic stabilisation and resilient domestic demand. Nigeria, the region’s largest economy, is expected to benefit from gradual recovery following recent currency and policy adjustments. Ghana’s fiscal consolidation efforts are beginning to restore confidence after acute stress.
The picture darkens elsewhere. North Africa is anticipated to expand by 3.58%, reflecting modest recovery constrained by tighter global financial conditions and softer external demand. Central Africa is forecast to grow by 3.36%, supported by oil revenues and selective investment flows, despite persistent security challenges and governance risks. These slower-growth regions highlight how external shocks and structural vulnerabilities continue to weigh on continental momentum.
The split in East Africa growth presents a clear opportunity for institutional investors seeking higher returns amid uneven continental recovery. The region’s shift toward services-led, infrastructure-backed expansion offers more resilience than commodity-dependent models. However, the African Export-Import Bank cautions that growth remains sensitive to exchange-rate pressures, fiscal consolidation efforts, and subsidy reforms, which could moderate outcomes in subsequent years.
Investors should monitor East Africa closely. The region’s 7.52% projected expansion significantly outpaces the continent’s 4.3% average, offering compelling entry points for those willing to navigate currency volatility and policy uncertainty. Meanwhile, the underperformance of oil exporters despite commodity gains suggests that commodity prices alone no longer drive African growth—structural reform and economic diversification now matter more.
The post East Africa growth leads continent at 7.52% in 2026 appeared first on FurtherAfrica.
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