Africa’s Investment Map is Being Redrawn – And My Children’s Future Depends on It
By Chimere Diop – Director, Strategic Growth & Market Development, APO Group
When I think about the future of Africa’s investment landscape, I don’t start with balance sheets or policy notes. I start with my three children, all born in Senegal. Their world will not be shaped by abstract charts – it will be defined by whether capital reaches the right projects, whether jobs are created close to home, and whether Africa’s story is told by us, not for us.
Earlier this month, on October 7th and 8th, 2025, Dakar hosted Forum Invest in Senegal (Fii Senegal 2025). For me, it was much more than a forum; it was a rehearsal for the future. My kids may not yet understand what sovereign wealth funds or development finance institutions are today, but the decisions taken in rooms like those will determine the opportunities open to their generation.
A Shift that Matters: Francophone Africa Rising
For too long, when global investors thought of Africa, they defaulted to Anglophone markets like Nigeria, Kenya, or South Africa. But the story has changed.
• In 2024, Africa attracted $97 billion in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), up 75% from the year before. Francophone Africa accounted for the lion’s share, with North Africa alone receiving $50.7 billion and West Africa $15.2 billion. Together, they made up two-thirds of all FDI to Africa.
• Morocco (+55%), Tunisia (+21%), and Senegal (over $2 billion) all posted meaningful inflows.
This is a map being redrawn, with Francophone Africa right at the centre. My children will grow up in a region no longer seen as the ‘periphery’, but as a blueprint for how capital can be disciplined, regional, and long-term.
What Made Dakar Different
Fii Senegal 2025 was not about filling auditoriums. It was about bankable pipelines, structured in ways that answered three investor questions up front:
1. Who can actually deliver this project?
2. Will the rules remain stable until it’s finished?
3. Can I get transparent, reliable information when I need it?
Senegal, through APIX and Vision 2050, showed that it can meet those expectations. From logistics corridors to industrial parks, the projects presented were not dream slides – they were investment-ready.
Why Communication is Capital
At APO Group, we often say visibility is viability. You can have the best project in the world, but if investors cannot see it, understand it, or trust it, it doesn’t exist.
That’s why we were proud to support APIX at Fii Senegal 2025, ensuring that Senegal’s investment story was told clearly, consistently, and credibly. Because ultimately, what builds confidence is not just policy or capital – it’s trust.
The Bigger Picture for My Children’s Generation
I picture my kids in a few years, walking through new digital campuses in Dakar; or seeing startups in Abidjan scale with cross-border capital; or hearing that Tunisia or Morocco just launched a blended-finance project mixing DFIs, sovereign wealth funds, and private money.
These are the foundations of futures where African children – mine and millions of others – can build their careers without leaving their continent.
The Takeaway
Africa is redrawing the investment map, and Francophone Africa is holding the pen. Dakar and Fii Senegal make an important mark – setting the tone for forums that convert, projects that deliver, and narratives that inspire trust.
That is the inheritance I want for my children. Not just opportunities on paper, but real, tangible pathways – engineered in Africa, financed by Africa, and designed for Africa’s future.
Chimere
Diop is based in Dakar, Senegal.