Artificial Intelligence (AI) is poised to redefine the economic landscape of Africa by transforming industries, accelerating innovation, and boosting productivity across the continent.
According to the African Development Bank (AfDB), if developed and deployed inclusively, AI could contribute up to US $1 trillion in additional GDP by 2035, nearly one-third of the continent’s current economic output.
This transformative potential highlights AI not just as a technological advancement, but as a critical driver for inclusive growth, innovation, and competitiveness across Africa’s diverse economies.
In a report titled “Africa’s AI Productivity Gain”, the AfDB emphasizes that Africa’s economic future will not only be shaped by growth rates but by how productively the continent utilizes its people, capital, and ideas.
According to the bank, AI offers a generational opportunity to shift from incremental gains to exponential outcomes, enabling Africa to achieve higher levels of efficiency, job creation, and competitiveness with the right investments and regulatory guardrails.
The report highlights that if Africa continues on its current trajectory marked by gradual improvements in infrastructure, trade, and services, its GDP is projected to reach US $4.23 trillion by 2035 (in constant 2015 dollars). This baseline assumes incremental reforms and a continuation of existing investment levels.
While stable, this path is not transformative, as it does not fully leverage the continent’s expanding labor force, strengthen fiscal capacity, or unlock the untapped productivity potential across sectors. AI presents an alternative and more ambitious path.
With the right adoption conditions including robust digital infrastructure, a skilled workforce, interoperable data systems, trusted governance frameworks, and adequate capital Africa’s economy could grow to US $5.23 trillion by 2035. This represents a US $1 trillion increase over the baseline, equivalent to nearly one-third of Africa’s current GDP.
According to the AfDB, the projected growth is driven by the strategic application of AI across both capital and labor-intensive sectors. In capital-intensive industries such as healthcare and finance, AI facilitates diagnostic support, fraud detection, and algorithmic credit scoring, improving service quality, efficiency, and financial inclusion.
In labor-intensive sectors like agriculture and retail, AI supports market analytics, precision farming, inventory optimization, and AI-assisted logistics, enhancing productivity through better decision-making, reduced waste, and expanded access to markets and services. Global experiences indicate that these AI applications, under the right readiness conditions, are transferable to African contexts.
The impact of AI extends beyond GDP. The report projects that an additional trillion dollars could generate 35 to 40 million net new digital and digitally enabled jobs, providing sustainable livelihoods for young Africans. Furthermore, it could yield US $150 billion in fresh annual tax revenue, which could be directed toward education, healthcare, and small business development.
Africa’s demographic trends reinforce the opportunity. Over the next decade, more than 300 million people will enter the working-age population, representing nearly 90% of global growth in this segment. If harnessed effectively, this youth surge can drive productivity, innovation, and growth. However, challenges remain: over 80% of workers are currently in the informal economy, and many small businesses are undercapitalized or lack access to formal financial services.
Signs of readiness, however, are emerging. Africa’s universities graduate more than 700,000 STEM students annually, yet fewer than one in nine secure recognized digital jobs. AI tools can help bridge this gap by enabling employers to identify talent more efficiently, recognize skills accurately, and improve SME access to credit—turning raw potential into real productivity.
Looking toward 2035, AI is expected to add US $25 trillion to the global economy, with Africa capturing a 4% share, slightly higher than its current contribution of just under 3% of global GDP.
The African Development Bank notes that achieving this potential requires decisive action across five critical enablers:
1. Establishing open and well-governed data systems.
2. Creating scalable, affordable compute infrastructure.
3. Developing strong pipelines of skilled professionals.
4. Implementing trust and safety frameworks.
5. Securing sufficient funding to scale proven AI projects.
The AfDB underscores that the AI dividend is not merely a headline number, it is a lever for inclusive growth, capable of transforming population trends and technological capability into tangible human prosperity.
Outlook
The path ahead positions Africa at a pivotal moment in its economic evolution. By investing in AI readiness and harnessing the demographic dividend, the continent can leapfrog traditional development barriers, create millions of sustainable jobs, and strengthen fiscal and social systems.
As African governments, businesses, and educational institutions collaborate to scale AI responsibly, the continent stands to become a hub of innovation, productivity, and inclusive prosperity.






