Is it possible that Africa has broken out of its ‘no-show’ status in industrialisation at last? Well, that is exactly what Business Insider is reporting.
As pleasantly surprising as that is equally the shocking dimension that it is none of the continent’s traditionally known-power houses that broke the jinx. In other words, this is not about Nigeria, Egypt or South Africa but Morocco, a monarchy.
To make this news even more interesting, the report is not written by any of the enforcers of neoliberal globalisation such as the IMF, the World Bank or the International Financial Cooperation (IFC) but by the African Development Bank (AfDB) which has its own developmental sensibilities.
Intervention reproduces below the Business Insider report of the development which will be pleasant news to Africa but a humbling news to the continent’s ‘super powers’ which have remained lost in the rhetoric of ‘reform’ and ‘renewed hope’ too scared to ever mention industrialisation:
Morocco has overtaken South Africa as Africa’s leading industrial economy, according to a new report by the African Development Bank, marking a major shift in the continent’s economic landscape.
- Morocco has overtaken South Africa as Africa’s leading industrial economy, according to a new AfDB report.
- The bank credited Morocco’s rise to strong industrial policies, export diversification and manufacturing growth.
- The report also warned that intra-African trade remains weak, exposing fragmented supply chains across the continent.
- AfDB officials say Africa’s industrial future depends on energy, infrastructure, financing and deeper regional integration through AfCFTA.

The Moroccan national flag: Monarchy teaching democracies how to transform from agrarian to industrial economy?
The bank unveiled its 2025 Africa Industrialisation Index during its Annual Meetings in Brazzaville, where it said Morocco climbed to the top through aggressive industrial upgrading, export diversification and long-term industrial policies.
The development signals a changing balance of economic influence in Africa, with Morocco increasingly positioning itself as a manufacturing and export hub connecting Europe, Africa and the Middle East.
While South Africa remains one of the continent’s biggest industrial powers, the report noted that the country has struggled with declining competitiveness in recent years.

Stranded continental power houses?
The AfDB said North and Southern Africa continue to dominate industrial production and export sophistication, while many countries in East, West and Central Africa still lag behind in manufacturing capacity and regional production networks.
The report also exposed one of Africa’s biggest economic weaknesses: poor intra-African trade. According to the AfDB, intra-African trade accounted for just 14.4% of total trade, highlighting fragmented supply chains and weak industrial integration across African economies.
The index assessed industrial development across 54 African countries between 2010 and 2024 and found that 41 countries improved their industrialisation scores, while Africa’s overall industrial performance rose by 6%.
Speaking at the launch, Ousmane Fall described the report as both a “diagnosis and roadmap” for Africa’s industrial future.
Fall said Africa’s industrial ambitions would depend on reliable energy, stronger infrastructure, technical skills, financing and deeper regional integration under the African Continental Free Trade Area framework.
























