LAGOS, June 6 – Africa’s economic growth story is increasingly being accompanied by a growing debt challenge, as rising debt-servicing costs place pressure on government finances across the continent despite improving macroeconomic performance.
According to data from the African Development Bank (AfDB), Africa’s external debt service payments have risen from approximately $61 billion in 2010 to an estimated $90 billion in 2026, a near-50% increase in a single decade and a half. Thirty-two African countries now spend more on servicing their debt than they do on healthcare. In at least twenty-two low-income countries across sub-Saharan Africa, the World Bank has assessed the debt situation as either already distressed or at high risk of becoming so.
And yet, simultaneously, the African Development Bank reports that Africa’s GDP surged to 4.2% in 2025 up from 3.1% in 2024 comfortably eclipsing the global average of 3.1%. Twenty-two countries grew above 5%. Six grew above 7%. The continent is, by conventional metrics, one of the world’s fastest-growing economic regions.
While these figures point to strong economic momentum, rising debt obligations are increasingly limiting governments’ ability to translate growth into broader development outcomes. Many African countries are now allocating more resources to debt repayments than to essential public services.
Development institutions estimate that dozens of countries across the continent spend more on servicing debt than on healthcare, education and social protection combined.
The challenge has become particularly acute in low-income economies, where debt vulnerabilities have intensified following years of borrowing to finance infrastructure, social spending and economic recovery programs.
The $90 Billion Drain
To understand Africa’s debt problem, you need to understand what debt service actually costs, not in abstract percentages, but in the concrete displacement of spending that never happens. The AfDB’s 2026 Macroeconomic Performance and Outlook report puts the structural case plainly: debt service is crowding out social and development spending at the precise moment when both are most needed.
Annual debt service expenditure across sub-Saharan Africa exceeded $101 billion last year, according to Brookings Institution analysis, a figure that absorbs fiscal resources that would otherwise fund health systems, educational infrastructure, climate adaptation, and the productive public investment that drives private sector confidence.
Africa Finance Corporation data shows the continent’s total domestic capital base sits at $4.4 trillion exceeding the approximately $1.7 trillion in cumulative external flows Africa received between 2014 and 2024. The capital exists. It is the architecture of its deployment that is failing the continent.
The trajectory is stark. Sub-Saharan Africa’s average public debt has roughly doubled over the past decade, rising from approximately 30 percent of GDP before the COVID-19 pandemic to nearly 60 percent by end-2024. External debt service payments escalated from $61 billion in 2010 to an estimated $163 billion by recent estimates — depending on methodology and coverage. African nations, according to Atlantic Council analysis, often face interest rates topping 10 percent on international borrowing, while G7 nations borrow at 2 to 3 percent.
“More than 50% of low-income countries in Africa are either in or at high risk of debt distress. Annual expenditure on debt service in the region exceeded $101 billion last year, crowding out spending on health, education, and social protection.” — Brookings Institution, February 2026
The Credit Rating Debate
The structural injustice of the current system becomes most visible. The AfDB’s 2026 MEO report identifies what it calls a fundamental paradox in sovereign risk pricing: African countries have among the lowest default rates on infrastructure and development projects globally yet they are charged among the highest borrowing costs.
GDP per capita is highly correlated with credit risk ratings in the current methodology. This means that a country with lower income per capita carries a higher implied risk premium regardless of its actual repayment history, its institutional reforms, or the quality of its fiscal management.
Ghana spent three years demonstrating the most consequential macroeconomic stabilisation in its modern history disinflating from 53.6% to 3.4%, rebuilding reserves to 5.7 months of import cover, and maintaining IMF programme compliance throughout. Its borrowing costs remain structurally elevated.
Zambia is another case in point. After emerging from default and completing a debt restructuring, the country faces borrowing costs that reflect historical stress rather than current trajectory. The credit rating methodology, in short, prices Africa for what it has been rather than what it is becoming and in doing so, perpetuates the very fragility it purports to measure.
The Domestic Debt Trap
As external financing has tightened, Eurobond markets became prohibitively expensive after the global rate cycle of 2022-2024, and ODA is structurally declining. African governments have turned increasingly to domestic debt markets. The AfDB’s MEO identifies this shift as generating four compounding risks.
First, domestic banks are financing larger shares of government borrowing. Second, private sector lending is being crowded out, limiting credit access for productive investment with adverse implications for job creation and long-term growth. Third, higher government exposure to domestic debt heightens financial sector risks potential fiscal stress can morph directly into banking system vulnerabilities. Fourth, banks’ exposure to government debt has risen sharply, deepening the sovereign-banking nexus across the continent.
This nexus is visible in the data for Angola, Kenya, Nigeria, and Zambia specifically, where large holdings of government securities by domestic banks have tied the health of the financial sector directly to government creditworthiness. It is a structural feedback loop: the government borrows domestically because external markets are expensive; banks buy the paper because yields are attractive relative to private sector risk; private sector credit tightens; growth becomes more dependent on government spending; and the government borrows more. The loop tightens.
“This is how the trap forms: domestic savings fund the state at high cost, fiscal dominance tightens and private credit is crowded out. Debt finances consumption; transformation lags.” — OMFIF, March 2026
$2.1 Trillion Sitting in the Wrong Assets
The most striking data point to emerge from the current cycle of AfDB and Africa Finance Corporation analysis is this: African institutional investors, pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, insurance companies, and central banks together manage more than $2.1 trillion in assets. Of that, over 80% is concentrated in government securities funding recurring government expenditure rather than productive long-term investment.
Pension and insurance assets alone have crossed the $1 trillion mark for the first time. Sovereign wealth funds hold $164 billion. Central bank reserves reached $530 billion in 2025. The African Development Bank’s New African Financial Architecture for Development (NAFAD) framework, endorsed by the African Union in February 2026, is designed precisely to address this misallocation seeking to mobilize these institutional assets for domestic infrastructure and private sector development rather than sovereign debt recycling.
The capital is not absent. The intermediation infrastructure that could redirect it, the regulatory frameworks, investment vehicles, governance structures, and risk-sharing mechanisms is what remains underdeveloped. That is a solvable problem. It is also a multi-year institutional build that has no shortcut.
What This Means for Investors
For institutional investors with African exposure, the current debt landscape generates four specific analytical imperatives.
First, the sovereign-banking nexus is the primary systemic risk to monitor. In markets where domestic banks hold concentrated positions in government paper, a sovereign credit event does not stay in the sovereign. It transmits immediately to the financial sector, tightening credit, reducing liquidity, and amplifying the growth shock. Nigeria, Kenya, Angola, and Zambia are the markets where this nexus is currently most pronounced.
Second, the credit rating divergence from actual default rates represents a structural mispricing opportunity for investors with long time horizons and genuine on-the-ground intelligence. The AfDB’s own data shows Africa’s infrastructure project default rates are among the lowest globally. The pricing does not reflect this. That gap will eventually close, the question is whether it closes through reform of rating methodology or through repeated crisis cycles that eventually force a recalibration.
Third, the NAFAD framework and its operationalisation timeline deserves close monitoring. If even a fraction of the $2.1 trillion in African institutional assets begins rotating into domestic infrastructure vehicles over the next 36 months, it will reshape capital market dynamics in the continent’s largest economies. The political commitment is there. The instruments are still being built.
Fourth, the G20 Common Framework for Debt Treatments continues to move too slowly for the scale of the problem. Creditor composition has become more complex, multilateral debt has grown 150 percent over the past decade, while private creditors remain largely outside coordinated restructuring processes. For investors in distressed or near-distressed sovereigns, the resolution timeline risk is significant.
The Question Nobody Is Asking
The AfDB’s OMFIF analysis raises a point that deserves wider attention: debt stocks are tracked to the decimal; yields are priced in real time. No comparable infrastructure tracks what debt-funded spending delivers. The asset side of African sovereign debt, what the borrowing actually built, the returns it generated, the productive capacity it created is systematically undermeasured.
This is not merely an accounting curiosity. It is a governance failure that perpetuates the mispricing problem. If creditors demanded precision on the asset side of the balance sheet with the same rigour they apply to liabilities, the conversation about Africa’s debt sustainability would change fundamentally. Countries with strong asset returns would borrow at lower cost. The discipline would improve fiscal quality. The cycle could break.
That reform requires both African governments and multilateral institutions to build the measurement infrastructure that does not currently exist. It is unglamorous work. It is also the most important structural reform in African sovereign finance that nobody is currently prioritizing at scale.