Digital innovation is sub-Saharan Africa is being driven by the explosion in mobile phone usage, enabling African consumers to leapfrog existing business models and technologies.
Rebounding economy after a trying year
Gas is West Africa’s new oil
Africa’s evolving role in FinTech leadership
Indicating a positive outlook for the continent, three key trends are forecast to take hold during the next 12 months.
The first indicated an economic rebound in sub-Saharan Africa driven by a recovery in the region’s economic heavyweights Nigeria and South Africa, and ongoing growth in the top performers, Ethiopia, Côte d’Ivoire and (more recently) Ghana.
Growth will be driven by a rise in oil production (notably in Ghana, Republic of Congo, Nigeria, and Angola), strengthening infrastructure investment across West and East Africa, and improved weather conditions which abode well for crops.
Strengthening economic activity, plus a moderate improvement in oil and mineral prices, will help narrow the current account deficit, but pressure on SSA currencies will remain.
The second emerging trend point to West Africa’s gas sector becoming a hive of activity in 2018 from Senegal to Angola, with the development of gas pipelines, floating liquefied natural gas (FLING) platforms and major gas field projects.
Governments in the Gulf of Guinea and across West Africa have ramped up efforts to secure gas supply in order to boost domestic power generation and diversify their revenues away from crude oil.
Deregulating the gas market and allowing market-driven gas prices will be ke to unlocking further gas infrastructure investment across the region.
The third trend suggests FinTech innovation in Africa picking up speed in 2018 buoyed by a new generation of Africans who are ‘digital natives.’ The proliferation of tech hubs across Africa (notably in South Africa, Kenya, Rwanda, Nigeria, Ghana, and Côte d’Ivoire) will nurture the next wave of Africa startups and help connect them with investors.
Digital innovation in SSA is being driven by the explosion in mobile phone usage, enabling African consumers to leapfrog existing business models and technologies.
African FinTech firms are increasingly driving this innovation, deploying digital tools to build credit profiles for the previously ‘unbankable’, providing electricity to rural households that were previously off the grid, even using artificial intelligence to diagnose health problems remotely.
Edward Georg, Head of Ecobank Group Research said: “The digital world moves apace, and so must we. The Africa FICC website is a key way that we can deliver our regional market analysis and expert local knowledge of 41 African markets – which is often hard to access – to a much wider audience. We think these three trends are strong evidence that Africa has weathered the storms of late and is very much on track for improved growth in 2018.”