ECONOMY
Morocco Emerges as Africa’s New Industrial Powerhouse – AfDB Report
Morocco has emerged as Africa’s new industrial powerhouse, overtaking South Africa as the continent’s leading industrial economy, according to two major reports unveiled during the African Development Bank Group 2026 Annual Meetings in Brazzaville.
The reports, the 2025 Africa Industrialisation Index (AII) and the inaugural Africa Industrial Investment Barometer (AfIIB), identified Morocco as the continent’s standout performer, citing sustained industrial upgrading, export diversification, and a consistent long-term industrial strategy as the key drivers behind its rise.
Launched by the African Development Bank Group in partnership with WITBA Invest SA and Trendeo, the reports provide what analysts described as the most detailed assessment yet of Africa’s industrial transformation and investment landscape.
The findings showed that North Africa now dominates the continent’s industrial ecosystem, attracting 56 per cent of cumulative African industrial investment between 2020 and 2025, with Morocco and Egypt leading the surge.
Morocco’s emergence at the top of the continental rankings reflects years of investment in industrial infrastructure, manufacturing clusters, export-oriented production, and strategic sectors such as automotive manufacturing, aerospace, fertilisers, renewable energy, and agro-processing.

The report noted that while South Africa remains a major industrial force, its competitiveness has steadily declined, allowing Morocco to take the lead through stronger policy coordination and industrial expansion.
Speaking during the launch, Ousmane Fall described the findings as evidence that African industrialisation is advancing, even if unevenly.
“This report is a roadmap as much as a diagnosis. It shows that 41 of our 54 countries are now moving in the right direction. Still, industrialisation at scale demands resilient infrastructure, value addition close to source, and finance mobilised on African terms,” he said.
The reports observed that Africa is experiencing a “silent but irreversible” industrial transition, although major structural challenges remain. Intra-African trade still represents only 14.4 per cent of total trade, highlighting weak regional production linkages and fragmented industrial ecosystems across the continent.
Despite improvements recorded in 41 African countries between 2010 and 2024, Africa continues to account for less than two per cent of global manufacturing output and only 1.4 per cent of global manufacturing exports. Manufacturing value-added per capita has also fallen below pre-2014 levels.
However, Morocco’s performance was singled out as a model of how targeted industrial policies, export diversification, and investment-friendly reforms can transform an economy into a continental production hub.
The Africa Industrial Investment Barometer further assessed industrialisation using indicators such as industrial diversification, investment attractiveness, and productive anchoring, which measures how deeply investments are integrated into local economies. Morocco ranked strongly across all three categories.
President of WITBA Invest, Harouna Kaboré, said Africa’s greatest challenge was no longer the absence of industrial strategies but the failure to implement them consistently.
“The continent’s real deficit is no longer the absence of industrial strategies. What is still lacking is execution discipline, continuity in public policy, and systemic coherence between financing, energy, infrastructure, human capital, governance, and industrial vision,” he stated.
The report contrasted Morocco’s industrial depth with the situation in several other African regions. While Southern Africa attracts large-scale industrial investment, it was criticised for weak local integration, particularly in the automotive sector where assembly plants rely heavily on imported components.
West and Central Africa, meanwhile, were described as being trapped largely in first-stage commodity processing, with products such as cocoa, bauxite, gold, and uranium exported in raw or semi-processed form without downstream industrial development.
The reports called for African countries to move beyond tariff reductions under the African Continental Free Trade Area and focus instead on building integrated industrial corridors, harmonised standards, reliable energy systems, and cross-border infrastructure.
They also urged African industries to begin decarbonising production processes to avoid being disadvantaged by future carbon-border trade regulations expected from Europe and the United States.
For investors, the reports identified strong opportunities in construction materials, agro-processing, fertilisers, and generic pharmaceuticals, stressing that long-term success in Africa would depend on strategic partnerships and patient capital.
Other panellists at the launch included Ismaël Nabé, Mutesi Rusagara, Michel Djombo, and Victor Djemba.
ECONOMY
Trump’s signature to appear on US currency, ending 165-year tradition

- Summary
- * Trump’s signature to start appearing on $100 bill in June, marking 250th US anniversary
- * Change to delete the US treasurer’s signature for the first time since 1861
- * Signature plan, latest Trump move to put his name on buildings, programs, ships, money
U.S. paper currency will bear President Donald Trump’s signature starting this summer, the first time a sitting president has signed American money, the Treasury Department said on Thursday.
The redesigned notes, planned to mark the 250th anniversary of American independence, will also for the first time in 165 years drop the signature of the U.S. treasurer, who reports to the Treasury Secretary and oversees the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, the U.S. Mint and other Treasury functions.
The first $100 bills with Trump’s signature and that of U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent will be printed in June, followed by other bills in subsequent months. The new bills may take several weeks to circulate through banks.
The Treasury is still producing notes bearing the signatures of former President Joe Biden’s Treasury secretary, Janet Yellen, and former Treasurer Lynn Malerba.
Malerba will be the last of an unbroken line of treasurers whose signatures have appeared on U.S. federal currency since 1861, when the U.S. government first issued it.
The signature change is the latest effort by the Trump administration and its allies to put the president’s name on buildings, institutions, government programs, warships and coins. A federal arts panel, whose members Trump appointed, approved last week the design for a commemorative gold coin with Trump’s image.
Bessent said in a statement that the move was appropriate for the U.S. 250th anniversary, given strong U.S. economic growth and financial stability during Trump’s second term.
“There is no more powerful way to recognise the historic achievements of our great country and President Donald J. Trump than U.S. dollar bills bearing his name, and it is only appropriate that this historic currency be issued at the Semiquincentennial,” Bessent said.
An effort to circulate a circulating $1 Trump coin was set back by laws prohibiting the depiction of living individuals on U.S. coins.
A statute governing the printing of Federal Reserve notes gives the Treasury broad discretion to change designs to guard against counterfeiting. The law requires keeping certain elements, including the words “In God We Trust,” and only allows portraits of deceased individuals.
The overall designs of bills will not change, except for Trump’s signature replacing the Treasurer’s, Treasury officials said. A mock-up of the $100 bill with Trump’s signature was not immediately available.
Malerba, the former treasurer, declined to comment on the Trump administration’s move.
Her predecessor, Jovita Carranza, who served as treasurer in Trump’s first term, called the change “a powerful symbol of American resilience, the enduring strength of free enterprise and the promise of continued greatness.”
The current treasurer, Brandon Beach, whose name has not appeared on the currency, also issued a supportive statement, saying Trump was the architect of a “golden age economic revival.”
Vanity Fair was the first to report the news.
-Reuters
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ECONOMY
Technical and Steering Committees Meet in Rabat as Nigeria-Morocco Gas Pipeline Project Records Major Milestones

The Nigeria-Morocco Gas Pipeline project has marked significant progress. Key technical, environmental, and institutional milestones have already been achieved.
This information comes from a statement by the National Office of Hydrocarbons and Mines (ONHYM).
As part of the project’s governance structure, the Technical Committee met on July 10. The Steering Committee held its meeting on July 11 in Rabat.
These sessions were convened in line with the memorandum of understanding. The memorandum was signed among participating national oil companies. The goal was to assess the project’s implementation status.
The ONHYM statement revealed that detailed engineering studies for the pipeline were concluded in 2024.
Environmental and social impact assessments (ESIA) and survey studies for the northern section have also been finalised. Similar evaluations for the southern segment—spanning Nigeria to Senegal—are currently in progress.
The pipeline is designed to transport 30 billion cubic meters of natural gas per year. It will be developed in phases.
A holding company will be established. It will oversee governance, funding, and construction. Three Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) will manage specific project segments.
The discussion recalled a major policy breakthrough. This was the adoption of the Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) at the 66th ECOWAS Summit in December 2024. This agreement clearly outlines the rights and responsibilities of the participating nations.
The regional cooperation was further strengthened. The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC), ONHYM, and the Togolese Gas Company (SOTOGAZ) signed a Memorandum of Understanding. This occurred on the sidelines of the Rabat meetings.
This agreement follows SOTOGAZ’s official inclusion in the project and complements earlier pacts signed with other partner countries.
The ONHYM statement emphasised the stakeholders’ satisfaction with the progress recorded and reaffirmed their collective commitment to maintaining the strong collaborative spirit necessary to deliver the project successfully.
Originally initiated by His Majesty King Mohammed VI of Morocco and Nigeria’s President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the Nigeria-Morocco Gas Pipeline is envisioned as a strategic infrastructure project with far-reaching economic and geopolitical implications.
It forms a key component of the Atlantic Initiative promoted by the Moroccan monarch and is expected to bolster regional integration, improve livelihoods, and position Africa more prominently on the global economic and energy map.
The project is also expected to deliver significant socio-economic benefits to all transit countries, enhancing energy access, stimulating investment, and promoting intra-African trade and cooperation.
ECONOMY
Macron pledges more French investment in Morocco

French President Emmanuel Macron stated on Tuesday in Rabat that public investments from France would continue in the Kingdom of Morocco, including in the Sahara.
Speaking before business leaders and economic operators at the closing of the “Morocco-France Entrepreneurial Meeting,” President Macron noted that the Kingdom is “the main client” of the French Development Agency (AFD) in terms of investments, assuring that the AFD would continue to fund projects in the Kingdom, including those undertaken by French companies in the Sahara.
He emphasized that France aims to develop a fair, win-win economic partnership with Morocco, considering the multiple complementarities between the two economies.
The French President highlighted the existing industrial partnership across various sectors and called for greater integration of value chains in response to a context of “re-regionalization of tariffs.”
Additionally, Macron expressed regret that European and French financial groups are forced to leave Africa “due to regulatory rules and standards that Europeans have set for themselves.” “I believe this is a terrible strategic mistake. (…) We Europeans need to reflect on the rules and restrictions we have imposed on our institutions,” the French Head of State stated during this meeting focused on future strategic sectors.
Co-organized by Morocco’s General Confederation of Moroccan Enterprises (CGEM) and the Movement of French Enterprises (MEDEF), through the France-Morocco Business Leaders Club, this meeting holds particular importance in the context of the French President Emmanuel Macron’s state visit to the Kingdom, at the invitation of His Majesty King Mohammed VI.
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