تجاوز إلى المحتوى الرئيسي

NOW

  • 2026-06-29 AUC Chairperson attended 50th Anniversary of Independece of Seychelles
  • 2026-06-19 AUC Deputy Chairperson at Celebration of International Day of Women in Diplomacy
  • 2026-06-17 OPENING REMARKS FOR H.E. MOSES VILAKATI COMMISSIONER FOR ARBE
  • 2026-05-27 Commissioner ARBE at Side Event on Financing the Africa Water Policy and Vision
  • 2026-05-26 Remarks AUC Deputy Chairperson at African Development Bank Group Annual Meetings
  • 2026-05-25 Statement by AUC Chairperson on the Occasion of Africa Day 2026
  • 2026-04-29 Statement by AUC Deputy Chairperson at 12th Session of ARFSD-12
  • 2026-04-27 Statement by IED Director at Experts Session of 5th STC on Transport and Energy
  • 2026-04-23 Address CEO AUDA-NEPAD at Annual Retreat of Group of African Ambassadors, China
  • 2026-04-23 Statement by AU Perm. Rep. to China at GAAC Annual Retreat
    • English
    • Français
    • العربية
    • Español
    • Português
    • Swahili

    Welcome

    الرئيسية
    African Union
    • Theme of the Year 2026: Assuring Sustainable Water Availability and Safe Sanitation Systems to Achieve the Goals of Agenda 2063
      • الصفحة الرئيسية
      • الوثائق
        • أجندة2063: أفريقيا التي نريد
        • التقارير والمعلومات المالية
      • الموارد
        • مكتبة الصور
        • فيديو
        • كتيب الإتحاد الأفريقي
        • النشرات
        • مواقع الكترونية للإتحاد الأفريقي
        • تسجيل الدخول
        • أرشيف مفوضية الإتحاد الأفريقي
      • الفرص
        • العمل بالإتحاد الأفريقي
        • المشتريات/ العطاءات
        • فيلق المتطوعين الشباب للإتحاد الأفريقي
        • فترة تدريب بالمفوضية
        • مركز المؤتمرات بمفوضية الإتحاد الأفريقي
        • زيارة مقر الإتحاد الأفريقي

      مسار التنقل

      1. الرئيسية

      Africa’s Industrial Revolution: Industrial policy set to shift from the business as usual approach

      Document Type
      Press releases
      Africa’s Industrial Revolution: Industrial policy set to shift from the business as usual approach
      Date
      تشرين 1/أكتوبر 18, 2022
      • Africa’s Industrial Revolution: Industrial policy set to shift from the business as usual approach
        Body

        Africa is endowed with a vast wealth of natural resources, ranging from precious stones such as gold and diamonds to fossil fuels, and has 40 percent of the world's gold and up to 90 percent of its chromium and platinum. The largest reserves of cobalt, diamonds, platinum and uranium in the world are in Africa. It holds 65 percent of the world's arable land and 10 percent of the planet's internal renewable fresh water source. In addition to its natural endowments, Africa has the youngest population in the world; around 60 percent of the continent’s population is currently below 25 years of age. With a population of about 1.3 billion people, the continent is one of the world’s largest free trade markets in the context of the new implemented African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) framework.

        Although, African industry is underperforming in terms of quality employment creation and total factors productivity. The African continent has not advanced to satisfactory industrialization levels. To reverse this situation, the attainment of inclusive and sustainable industrialization and economic diversification in Africa is a priority item on the development agenda. Africa’s drive for industrialization will benefit from an innovative policy mix that combines the focus on traditional manufacturing with a forward-looking focus on new and emerging high-sophisticated opportunities. This will yield certainly significant economic progress across Africa, particularly with the new Africa Industrial Revolution Strategy (AIRS) framework associated with the fully integrated African market under the AfCFTA.

        Despite historical policy limitations, Africa now has another chance. Some attributes of the regional economy as well as global conditions present the continent with new frontier opportunities to industrialize, several of which transcend the scope of manufacturing. Appropriating these opportunities requires certain framework conditions which are necessary to overcome major weaknesses and plug deficits in critical parts of the economy that drive structural transformation and economic diversification. Industrial policy in Africa should no longer look like business as usual. There is an urgent need to take bold action and implement disruptive and evidence-based policies along three broad lines, among others, that surmise the framework conditions: active promotion of industrial exports, promotion of industrial agglomeration, and an aggressive move towards industrial financing.

        For this to happen, African governments need to be entrepreneurial, being willing to experiment, build capacity and invest. So, what exactly should industrial policy in Africa now look like? There are two sets of prescriptions: policies at the country level and policies that require supranational coordination. At the country-level policies are needed to improve the business climate; support the act of exporting added-value goods and services; and support upgrading of firms. At the regional and continental level, there is a need for a clear policy learning mechanism; coordinated trade and industrial policies; common markets and free trade areas where missing; stronger integration; and coordination of regulations on trade and ancillary services across countries.

        As the African Union convenes the Summit on Industrialization and Economic Diversification, emphasis is on a shift to a revolutionary and innovative industrialization strategy that should reflect on the lessons learned and accelerates the achievement of structural transformation by speeding up production capabilities, the rate of innovation and increasing welfare gains. A wider range of economic sectors, including tradable services and digital technologies offer opportunities for increased economic growth, innovation, and employment and wealth creation. These sectors present opportunities for Africa to integrate within itself and into global production value chains. Given their relatively lower entry barriers, these sectors are also attractive to Africa’s teeming youth population and therefore offer a means to reaping the continent’s demographic dividends.

        Five action-oriented solutions under the new Africa Industrial Revolution Strategy (AIRS) that will address policy-related blunders that have hindered Africa’s industrialization efforts.

        The convening of the African Union Extraordinary Summit on Industrialization and Economic Diversification, will seek action-oriented solutions that will ensure that;

        1. Disruptive approach for the Industrial Development Policy Design in the new era of Africa Industrial Revolution that should be evidence-based and customized to the domestic and regional context with due considerations of the African economic realities in a case by case, while avoiding duplicating (copy/paste) successive policies from other regions of the world.
        2. Enhancing actions towards clear and coherent implementation and financing plans for continental and national-level strategies. This includes favourable public budgetary allocation to industrialization; capacity to mobilize resources including taxes; adequate continental industrial development funds; leveraging on remittances; higher investment flows into quality productive sectors; and innovative infrastructural financing.
        3. Gaps that have hindered Africa from accumulating wealth during the continent’s commodity boom are sealed: African countries lost an opportunity to accumulate funds towards long-term development despite the discovery of oil and numerous other raw minerals. There demonstrates the urgency for the domestication of bold and results-based industrial development policies.
        4. There is strengthened capacity for industrial policy: Better coordinated policies across countries, for instance, Africa industrial policy should be treated collaboratively with other relevant policies such as those related to trade, infrastructure and education. The many years of emphasis on structural reforms and the doing business reforms that followed weakened the capacity for effective industrial policies in most African states.
        5. Strengthening intra-African trade: Trade within Africa, the world’s second largest continent is of critical importance. Strengthening intra-African trade for better integration into the international trade helps deeper integration of the African industrial Ecosystems with foreign exchange returns from high added-value export, among others.

        For more details about the African Union Extraordinary Summit on Industrialization and Economic Diversification, visit - https://au.int/en/summit-africa-industrialization-economic

        For further information, please contact:

        Doreen Apollos | Information and Communication Directorate | African Union Commission | Tel: +251 115 517 700 | E-mail: ApollosD@africa-union.org l | Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

        Link

        Images

        • Africa’s Industrial Revolution: Industrial policy set to shift from the business as usual approach

          References

          Department Tags
          Economic Development, Tourism, Trade, Industry, Minerals (ETTIM)

          Economic Development, Tourism, Trade, Industry, Mining (ETTIM)

          • Home
          • Areas of Work
            • Economic Policy and Research
            • Regional Integration and Cooperation
            • Statistics
            • Regional Integration and Cooperation
            • Private Sector Development, Investments and Resource Mobilization
          • Key Events
            • Committee of Director Generals of National Statistics Office (CoDG)
            • Congress of African Economists
            • Conference of African Ministers responsible for Civil Registration
            • Coordination Meeting AUC-UNECA-AfDB-RECs
            • STC on Finances, Monetary Affairs, Economic Planning and Integration
          • Fridays of the Commission
          • Documents
          • Speeches
          • Contacts

          Departments

          • Theme of the Year 2026

            Department Resources

            • Key Documents
            • Speeches
            • All Documents
            Documents
            Continental Circular Economy Action Plan for Africa (2024-2034)
            2025-09-10
            Documents
            Draft Declaration of the African Union Conference on Debt
            2025-05-14

            AFRICAN UNION CONFERENCE ON DEBT
            LOME, TOGO
            12th to 14th May 2025

            Reports
            Made By Africa : Creating Value Through Integration
            2022-11-22
            Policy Documents
            The African Continental Free Trade Area - Rules of Origin Manual
            2022-10-12
            More
            Speech
            Speeches
            Commissioner HHS Statement on the Commemoration of the International Day Against Drug Abuse And Illicit Trafficking (World Drug Day)
            2026-06-26
            Speech
            Speeches
            Keynote Speech by H.E. Amb. Selma Malika Haddadi, AUC Deputy Chairperson, at the Celebration of the International Day of Women in Diplomacy
            2026-06-19
            Speech
            Speeches
            OPENING REMARKS FOR H.E. MOSES VILAKATI COMMISSIONER FOR AGRICULTURE, RURAL DEVELOPMENT, BLUE ECONOMY AND SUSTAINABLE ENVIRONMENT 11 OUR OCEAN CONFERENCE
            2026-06-17
            Speech
            Speeches
            All statement delivered on the event: The African Union Commission, Zambia, And Acmad Convene Continental Dialogue To Strengthen Africa's Preparedness For El Niño 2026/2027 Through Enhanced And Timely Weather And Climate Services
            2026-06-15
            Documents
            اتفاقية الاتحاد الأفريقي لإنهاء العنف ضد النساء والفتيات
            2024-10-02

            اتفاقية الاتحاد الأفريقي لإنهاء العنف ضد النساء والفتيات (AUCEVAWG) هي أداة قانونية شاملة تهدف إلى منع والقضاء على جميع أشكال العنف ضد ال

            Documents
            قالب السيرة الذاتية للمتقدم لمنصب القيادة العليا
            2020-07-07
            Documents
            اجتماع ثنائي بين رئيس مفوضية الاتحاد الافريقي ووزير خارجية جمهورية نيجيريا
            2019-01-31
            Documents
            إستمارة إعتماد وسائل الإعلام
            2019-01-10
            More

            About the African Union

            An Integrated, Prosperous and Peaceful Africa, driven by its own citizens and representing a dynamic force in the global arena.

            African Union Headquarters
            P.O. Box 3243, Roosvelt Street W21K19
            Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
            Tel: +251 11 551 77 00
            Fax: +251 11 551 78 44

            Follow Us

            Opportunities

            • Bids / Procurement
            • Careers
            • Internship
            • Procurement / Bids
            • African Union Youth Volunteer Corps
            • Visit the AU Headquarters
            • AU Library
            • Achats / Offres

            Quick Links

            • Home
            • AU Handbook
            • Agenda 2063
            • Financing the Union
            • All African Union websites
            • Agenda 2063
            • AU Organs

            • Web Mail
            • Legal Notice
            • Official Warning

            © The African Union Commission