The USD 4 T Stuck In Africa’s Vault While Critical Needs Starve
Africa has a massive USD 4 T problem that isn’t down to a lack of money but money getting stuck, a new report from United Bank for Africa (UBA), one of the continent’s banking giants, uncovers.
The study reveals a paradox such that African economies are sitting on a massive pool of domestic capital—including USD 2.5 T in commercial bank assets and over USD 1.1 T in pensions and insurance funds—yet they remain starved of the financing needed to build roads, power grids, and factories.
The findings expose a fundamental failure in the continent’s financial plumbing. Instead of funding productive infrastructure, a huge share of local capital is vacuumed up by government debt, crowding out private investment and leaving a yawning annual infrastructure gap of up to USD 170 B.
But a shake-up is underway. African financial institutions, long relegated to junior roles, are now aggressively stepping in to fill the void left by retreating correspondent banks and hesitant international lenders.
They are financing mega-projects from within, backing everything from Nigeria’s massive Dangote Refinery to Tanzania’s Julius Nyerere hydropower dam, and building the payment rails to make cross-border trade cheaper and faster.
The catalyst is the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), which is morphing from a paper agreement into a tangible economic force. Its financial counterpart, the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS), is already slashing the cost of moving money across borders, saving an estimated USD 5 B a year by allowing businesses to settle trades in local currencies within seconds, bypassing the U.S. dollar.
The shift has turned Africa into a strategic battleground for global capital. The U.S. is pushing “commercial diplomacy,” the E.U. is deploying blended finance, and Gulf states are executing a port-and-logistics land grab. Yet the report argues that the most decisive players will be African banks that can unlock their own USD 4 T vault.
The race is on to fix a broken financial engine. If they succeed, it could redefine the continent’s economic sovereignty. If not, the USD 4 T will remain a tantalising, trapped asset.