Infrastructure Investments: Building Africa’s Digital Backbone for Growth

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Infrastructure Investments: Building Africa’s Digital Backbone for Growth

Across Africa, conversations about digital transformation often revolve around fintech apps, AI, or the promise of e-government. But there is a more fundamental truth: none of these innovations can scale without the right infrastructure.

From subsea cables to inland fibre, data centres to internet exchanges, infrastructure investments are not glamorous—but they are the foundation upon which innovation stands.

The Governance Lens on Infrastructure Capital

Having sat on two investment committees—one in insurance, another in venture capital—as well as the board of Ghana’s Investment Fund for Electronic Communications –GIFEC (which allocates universal access funds for ICT infrastructure), I’ve seen firsthand how capital allocation decisions shape long-term outcomes.

  • Insurance investments emphasize stability, risk management, and sustainable returns.

  • Venture capital emphasizes growth, agility, and the capacity to back bold bets.

  • GIFEC balances financial stewardship with national inclusion goals, investing in connectivity for underserved communities.

These three lenses—risk, growth, and inclusion—mirror the balance Africa must strike in digital infrastructure investments. Governance, therefore, is not a footnote. It is the multiplier that ensures that capital, once deployed, creates lasting resilience and inclusion.

Why Infrastructure Needs Patient and Coordinated Capital

Africa is not short of bandwidth. With the arrival of new subsea cables, capacity at landing stations has multiplied. The challenge lies inland: getting fibre to the hinterlands, investing in last-mile solutions, and building the neutral data centres and exchanges that keep traffic local and affordable.

This requires patient capital and regional cooperation. For example, Ghana’s own progress with multiple subsea cables has positioned it as a hub, but without deeper investment in inland corridors, the benefits remain concentrated in Accra. Nigeria, Kenya, and South Africa have made similar advances, but the continent still struggles with fragmentation.

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It is in the cross-border corridors and wholesale infrastructure markets that Africa’s long-term competitiveness will be decided. Players who think beyond national boundaries, and who can bring scale to fragmented markets, will set the pace.

The Investment Committee Imperative

Boards and their investment committees must now move beyond short-term returns and begin asking harder questions:

  • Are we investing in infrastructure that lowers Africa’s cost-to-connect and enables fintech, trade, and AI industries to thrive?

  • Are our models inclusive, ensuring that rural Africa is not left behind while cities thrive?

  • Are we building resilience into our networks, so that a single cable cut does not threaten national productivity?

These are not abstract governance questions. They are investment committee imperatives—and I have seen the difference when boards take them seriously.

The Case for Strategic Infrastructure Governance

Africa’s digital backbone will determine whether we remain consumers of global platforms or become co-creators in the next wave of digital growth. To achieve this, boards must embrace a governance model that is bold, collaborative, and disciplined in capital allocation.

Infrastructure is destiny. And in Africa, it is the investment decisions we make today—in fibre, subsea cables, data centres, and exchanges—that will define whether digital transformation is inclusive, resilient, and truly transformative.