The numbers on paper have never looked better for African manufacturing. The continent holds 18.3% of the world’s population, is projected by the IMF to grow at 4.1% in 2026, outpacing the global average of 3.0% and consistently ranks among the world’s fastest-growing regions. Global supply chains are fracturing. Companies are scrambling to find alternatives to China. Geopolitical risk has made "cheapest" less important than "closest" and "safest."
And yet. Africa accounts for just 2% of global manufacturing value added and 1.3% of global manufacturing exports. The gap between what Africa should be capturing and what it actually is capturing has not closed. In several key metrics, it has widened.
The reshoring wave is real, but Africa isn’t catching it
The structural shift in global manufacturing is not theoretical. 82% of manufacturers have moved or are moving factories back toward domestic or near-domestic production. 58% of CEOs with overseas operations are actively considering reshoring. Only 7% of manufacturers globally are not discussing it at all.
26% of companies surveyed globally planned to nearshore in 2025. In the US that number hit 33%, and in the EU 28%. Inspection demand a reliable early indicator of where production is actually moving surged in Mediterranean sourcing hubs, Morocco up 53% year-on-year in Q2 2025, Egypt up 73%, Tunisia up 35%. North Africa is capturing some of this shift. Sub-Saharan Africa, largely, is not.
The China-Africa complication
In the first five months of 2025, China’s exports to Africa grew 20.2% year-on-year, reaching $84.8 billion. Chinese shipments of construction machinery to Africa rose 63% year-on-year, and passenger car exports more than doubled.
On the surface this looks like development. Look closer and it’s a structural problem: Africa is absorbing Chinese finished goods while exporting raw materials. China-Africa trade reached a record mid-$300 billion range in 2025, but Africa’s trade deficit with China has widened significantly. Africa is selling commodities and buying manufactured products exactly the value-chain position it has been trying to escape for two decades.
China will extend zero-tariff treatment to all 53 African countries with diplomatic ties to Beijing from May 1, 2026. This is being received as an opportunity. Economists are more cautious: zero tariffs lower the barrier to accessing China’s market, but they don’t build the processing facilities, logistics infrastructure, or skilled labour base needed to actually produce export-ready manufactured goods.
The structural gaps that keep closing the door
South Africa holds 37% of global manganese reserves. Its domestic smelting capacity has collapsed due to electricity costs and logistics failures what analysts are calling the "manganese paradox": resource-rich, processing-poor.
As China looks to reroute exports toward the Global South amid US tariffs, African countries face a surge of cheap, subsidised Chinese imports that directly undercut domestic manufacturing sectors that are already operating on thin margins with unreliable power supply.
Africa’s logistics performance trails global benchmarks by 20–30%. AfCFTA, the continental free trade framework that could theoretically increase intra-African trade by 52%, is expected to drive a 28% surge in freight demand by 2030, but only if cross-border infrastructure investment follows. It hasn’t, at the pace required.
The window is still open narrowly
Africa’s cotton market alone is estimated at $6 billion in 2025, growing to $7.5 billion by 2030. The International Trade Centre projects the continent could export €5.8 billion in finished cotton garments by 2026. That’s value-added manufacturing from a resource Africa already grows. The infrastructure and policy to capture it is the missing piece and it has been the missing piece for thirty years.
The global manufacturing map is being redrawn right now. The question isn’t whether Africa has the resources, the population, or the market. It has all three. The question is whether governments and investors move fast enough to build the processing capacity, stabilise the power supply, and harmonise the trade frameworks before the window closes and the next wave of manufacturing investment settles somewhere else.
Analysts estimate 25% of global trade will relocate by 2026 amid geopolitical instability. Some of it will come to Africa. Most of it, based on current trajectory, will not.
Written by:
*Chloe Maluleke
Associate at BRICS+ Consulting Group
Russia & Middle East Specialist
**The Views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of Independent Media or IOL.
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