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DAVOS – Consequential Africa: Making Development Investable in a Fragmenting Global Economy

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
February 12, 2026
in Business
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DAVOS – Consequential Africa: Making Development Investable in a Fragmenting Global Economy
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London / Johannesburg — launched for Davos 2026

Global institutional portfolios now exceed $300 trillion, yet they face a growing scarcity of assets capable of absorbing capital at scale while delivering duration, diversification, real-economy growth, and resilient returns. Consequential Africa argues that this is no longer a peripheral problem of emerging markets — it is a structural constraint on global portfolio construction.

Africa sits at the centre of that constraint — not as a recipient of capital, but as a structural solution to it.

The continent’s economic and geostrategic endowments — critical minerals, renewable energy basins, nature assets, food systems, trade corridors, and demography — position Africa as a core pillar of the $10-trillion-plus and rapidly expanding global green industrial economy, rather than a marginal market competing for attention.

As the world’s last major industrial and infrastructure build-out zone, Africa requires an estimated $200–250 billion per year in investment but currently attracts less than $80 billion, according to G20 and multilateral development bank data. Consequential Africa shows that this gap is not driven by a lack of opportunity, but by the historic absence of investable systems — producing a persistent 300–700 basis-point capital premium and an estimated $4–6 trillion loss in diversification, duration, and growth opportunity for global portfolios over the past two decades.

The blueprint set out in Consequential Africa is that this mispricing is now structurally reversible.

Through the GreenAlpha framework, African green industrial development is organised into institutional-grade asset platforms built around corridor systems and Institutional Investor–Public Partnerships (IIPPs) anchored by African pension funds and sovereign wealth capital alongside aligned global asset owners. These structures aggregate demand, standardise governance, embed investor protections, and enable repeatable, at-scale issuance — allowing development to be held, priced, benchmarked, and allocated like the asset classes global investors already own.

“Africa’s economic and geostrategic endowments make it a structural pillar of the global green industrial economy — not a peripheral market. Through GreenAlpha and IIPPs, development can now be structured to look, behave, and perform like investable asset classes — with scale, governance, and repeatability. As global portfolios confront tightening duration and concentration constraints, Africa shifts from a marginal exposure to a structural allocation consequence.” said Dr Hubert Danso, Chairman and CEO of Africa Investor Group

For global asset owners and investment consultants, Consequential Africa reframes Africa from a special-case or thematic exposure into a long-duration allocation necessity as traditional markets struggle to provide sufficient scale, yield, and real-economy growth.

For African governments and domestic asset owners, the implication is equally clear: the fastest route to economic and portfolio consequentiality lies not in continent-wide consensus, but in first-mover execution — anchoring the initial corridor and IIPP platforms that convert development into investable, risk-adjusted systems. Once established, replication follows fiduciary logic rather than political negotiation, as track record replaces uncertainty.

Consequential Africa is essential reading for asset owners, investment consultants, and sovereign leaders convening at Davos 2026, the African Union Summit, the SMI Terra Carta Exhibition, the G7, and the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM). It positions Africa not as a beneficiary of global capital, but as a partner and structural solution to the world’s capital-allocation and long-term industrial growth challenge.

Read the Consequential Africa report

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