The Debt Paradox (A DeeEnvoy Policy Reflection)

They say Africa is rising. It is a phrase that appears frequently in global development discourse, featured in reports by institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, and echoed across investment forums and diplomatic conversations. It is convenient. It is optimistic. It is marketable. But it is also deeply misleading, because what is often framed as “rise” is, in reality, structured resistance within unequal systems.

Africa’s economic growth narrative is frequently cited as evidence of progress, yet this growth is increasingly constrained by external financial pressures. As of 2024, over twenty African countries are either in or at high risk of debt distress, with the continent’s external debt stock exceeding $650 billion, much of it owed to non-African creditors. In several cases, countries spend more on debt servicing than on healthcare, while interest rates on African sovereign borrowing remain significantly higher than global averages.

This is not a system that enables rise; it is a system that demands continuous adjustment and negotiation for survival. And yet, African economies continue to function, adapt, and grow within these constraints. That is not passive growth; that is economic resistance.

Nowhere is this paradox more evident than in Nigeria, often described as Africa’s largest economy and a continental anchor for growth. Beneath this narrative lies a more complex fiscal reality. Nigeria’s public debt has risen sharply in recent years, and at several points the country has allocated the overwhelming majority of its revenue to debt servicing. This leaves critical sectors such as healthcare, education, and infrastructure persistently underfunded despite positive GDP signals. Growth exists, but control does not. Fiscal space is constrained, policy autonomy is narrowed, and development priorities are too often shaped by repayment obligations rather than long-term national strategy. Yet the system holds. That endurance is not evidence of a rise; it is evidence of resilience under structural pressure.

A different but instructive trajectory can be seen in Rwanda, where a more disciplined and strategic approach to debt management has produced relatively stronger outcomes.

Rwanda has focused on transparency, channeling borrowed funds into productive sectors such as infrastructure, tourism, and the digital economy, while maintaining more manageable debt ratios compared to several peers. The contrast suggests that the issue is not debt alone, but how it is structured, negotiated, and deployed. However, even Rwanda operates within the same global financial architecture that assigns higher borrowing costs to African countries regardless of internal reforms, reinforcing the broader structural imbalance.

Across the continent, this imbalance is clear. African countries face a high cost of capital, persistent currency volatility that inflates repayment burdens, and a continued dependence on external creditors, all while holding limited influence within global financial decision-making systems. This is not a neutral framework. It is one that requires constant adaptation and absorbs shocks unevenly, even as African economies are assessed through simplified narratives of growth.

Within this context, the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) present both a promise and a paradox. Goals such as poverty reduction, good health, and decent work are essential, yet achieving them requires sustained investment. In countries like Nigeria, where fiscal capacity is heavily absorbed by debt servicing, the ability to fund these priorities becomes constrained. The question then emerges: how can nations meet ambitious development targets when their financial resources are structurally limited?

While the SDGs offer a vital framework for accountability, partnership, and innovative financing mechanisms, they do not in themselves restructure global debt systems or equalize borrowing conditions. Without deeper systemic reform, they risk becoming aspirations that are universally endorsed but unevenly attainable.

Africa’s story, therefore, is not one of simple ascent. It is a story of economies growing under constraint, of governments negotiating survival within unequal systems, and of citizens adapting to the realities of global financial asymmetry. To call this a rise is to misunderstand the terrain. What is unfolding across the continent is not a straightforward upward trajectory, but a steady, strategic resistance within a system that was never designed for equitable growth.

 

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Adeniyi Ifetayo Moses is an Entrepreneur, Award winning Celebrity journalist, Luxury and Lifestyle Reporter with Ben tv London and Publisher, Megastar Magazine. He has carved a niche for himself with over 15 years of experience in celebrity Journalism and Media PR.

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