Sub-Saharan Africa’s Growth is Rising
- May 5, 2025
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The World Bank has released a new Africa’s Pulse report—and while the headline shows economic growth is on the horizon for Sub-Saharan Africa, the fine print carries important implications for business leaders, investors, and policy-makers across the region.
Economic activity is expected to rise from 3.3% in 2024 to 3.5% in 2025, and could accelerate to 4.3% by 2026–27. However, the region’s largest economies—South Africa, Nigeria, and Angola—are underperforming, dragging down the continent’s overall progress.
When three of the region’s biggest economies underperform, it sends mixed signals to international investors. Their sluggish growth undermines confidence and makes it harder for smaller, faster-growing countries to attract the foreign direct investment (FDI) they deserve.
Startups and SMEs across the region, especially in countries like Kenya, Senegal, and Rwanda, may face longer timelines to close funding or see reduced capital inflows despite strong fundamentals.
The report notes that while inflation is cooling in many countries, 14—including Nigeria and Angola—still face double-digit rates. This creates pricing instability for goods and services across borders, complicating procurement, supply chain planning, and cross-country expansion.
Businesses operating in or sourcing from these high-inflation environments may struggle with unpredictable costs, exchange rate volatility, and weakened consumer purchasing power.
Perhaps the most concerning insight: despite growth projections, real income per capita in 2025 will still be 2% below its 2015 level. Extreme poverty, affecting nearly 44% of the population, is projected to fall only slightly by 2027.
For businesses, this means slower expansion of middle-class markets and reduced consumer spending—especially for sectors like retail, housing, education, and financial services. Social enterprises and NGOs also face greater pressure, with high poverty rates increasing demand for support services while donor funding shrinks.
The World Bank warns that growing global policy uncertainty—geopolitical tensions, trade fragmentation, and reduced aid—may further destabilize the region. For entrepreneurs and ecosystem builders, this creates a risk-filled environment where long-term planning becomes difficult and adaptation becomes a daily requirement.
It also means local innovations in climate resilience, agriculture, and fintech must not only survive but scale without the cushion of reliable external support.
Sub-Saharan Africa has no shortage of talent, ideas, or energy. The fact that the rest of the region (excluding South Africa, Nigeria, and Angola) is expected to grow by 4.6% in 2025 and 5.7% in 2026–27 proves that.
But for that momentum to translate into real transformation, we must confront the drag effect of underperforming giants. This includes pushing for reform, increasing regional collaboration, and building systems that lift all players—not just the big ones.
At OfficePhase, we believe in the power of collective growth. Let’s pay attention to the numbers—but let’s respond by backing the people, businesses, and ideas that are already outpacing expectations.

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