Africa's Youth Can Save The World
Africa's Youth Can Save The World
AFRICA’S YOUTH
CAN SAVE THE WORLD
By Jack A. Goldstone
and John F. May
VOL ISSUE
16 02
ECSP Report: Volume 16, Issue 02
Authors: Jack A. Goldstone, Phd, Wilson Center Global Fellow, Hazel Professor of Public Policy at George
Mason University and John F. May, Phd, Research Professor of Public Policy at George Mason University
and a member of the Belgian Royal Academy
Series Editor: Lauren Risi
Issue Editors: Richard Byrne and Lauren Risi
Production Editor: Angus Soderberg
Design and Layout by the Wilson Center: Sharon McGill
Research assistance provided by: Feyza Darilmaz, Angelo Santos and Khwaja Zayeem, funded by a grant
from the Charles Koch Foundation.
The authors wish to thank the Wilson Center’s Oge Ogubondo (Africa Program Director) and
Nancy Walker (Senior Advisor for Programs) for feedback that greatly improved the paper.
This report builds on an earlier article, “The Global Economy’s Future Depends on Africa,” authored
by Jack A. Goldstone and John F. May and published in Foreign Affairs on May 23, 2023.
© October 2023, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
Cover: Girls in school, Africa (Riccardo Mayer / shutterstock.com)
As China did before it, African growth can transform the global
By 2060, Africa’s
economy. China’s GDP per capita was just half that of Ethiopia
today at the beginning of its great boom. Urbanization, educa- 2.9 billion people will
tion (especially at the secondary level), and foreign investment be as many as China
drove China’s remarkable growth. Africa possesses many of the
same qualities.
and India combined.
If its development
The looming climate change crisis means that Africa’s growth must
be green, however. By 2060, Africa’s 2.9 billion people will be as depends on fossil-fueled
many as China and India combined. If its development depends on energy, its increased
fossil-fueled energy, its increased carbon emissions will more than
carbon emissions will
offset any CO2 reductions by Europe, the United States, and China.
Fortunately, the continent boasts enormous potential for clean more than offset any
wind, solar, and geothermal energy, as well as its already plentiful CO2 reductions by
hydropower. While the entire world will benefit from a green and
growing Africa, its exceptional vulnerability to droughts and food
Europe, the United
insecurity means its citizens may reap the greatest benefits. States, and China.”
Africa is more often viewed as a source of problems for the world than a place that offers solutions, but
nothing could be more mistaken. In fact, Africa’s social and economic development likely holds the key to
solving many of the problems facing other countries. If the continent’s leaders can unite their people behind
policies that drive economic growth, spur education, and create conditions attractive to foreign investment,
Africa’s youth can lead a global economic boom.
Other countries must pursue a course with African countries that values cooperation over competition. As
the developed countries go “grey,” young people will become the scarcest resource. African countries will
need support to develop that resource through outside investments in health, education, and clean energy.
Africa must succeed for the global economy to prosper.
The world’s great powers are again seeking influence in Africa, just as they did in the 19th century. The
earlier era saw these nations arrive to gain control of territory and extract resources. Today’s great powers
come to donate and invest, build markets and infrastructure, and seek partnerships with sovereign states.
To be sure, great powers also still seek access to resources—oil and gas, copper and gold, diamonds and
platinum, cobalt and cocoa. But the export of raw materials will soon become secondary to Africa’s real
resource in the 21st century: the human capital of its youthful population. And African leaders already are
seeking to guide the continent’s leap forward into a clean energy economy.
If Africa’s leaders succeed in realizing the potential of their youthful populations as they pioneer clean energy
growth, they will not only improve the lives of Africans. They will also deliver huge benefits to the entire world.
Europe in 1900 was already swollen by the growth that followed the Industrial Revolution. In that era, its
population of just over 400 million was three times as large as Africa’s total. Thus, Europe outpaced Africa
in sheer numbers, as well as in technical and economic development.
400+ million
138 million
Such data and projections often are used to arouse fears of uncontrolled immigration, or of Europe being
overwhelmed or transformed by non-Europeans. Yet that is not the only—and certainly not the most pro-
ductive—way to look at this situation. Africa’s youth are not a threat, but rather a remarkable opportunity.
The prosperity of the entire world depends on recognizing and promoting it.
Not only does labor remain relevant to economic growth, but younger workers, armed with the latest
education and proclivity to innovation, remain critical. Adding more younger, higher-skilled workers to the
labor force is a far more powerful impetus to growth than trying to augment the output of older workers
whose productivity generally peaks at 40 years of age.
From 1980 to 2020, fully one quarter of the entire increase in global GDP was due to China’s growth—a
larger contribution than from the United States (22%), the European Union (12%), or Japan (4%). And from
2010 to 2020, when the United States and Europe were still in a slow recovery from the Great Recession,
the world depended even more on China. That decade saw China’s growth account for over 40% of the
world’s total rise in real GDP.
Where will the world find another motor of growth to play the role that China has played in the last forty
years? The days of China’s rapid growth are likely over. India is often touted as the “next China,” but that
too is unlikely.
The factors that drove China’s growth engine are now stalling or going into reverse. The main driver of
China’s post-1980 miracle was a massive surge in the labor force. Plus, its burgeoning productivity was
multiplied many times over by a shift from low-productivity rural agriculture to much higher productivity
work in mining, construction, and factories.
Yet China’s future promises no larger wave of far better educated workers. Decades of declining birth rates
mean its prime-age workforce is already in decline; it will plummet by another one-quarter in the next 20
years and by one-third over the following decade. Then add an already overbuilt housing sector and infra-
structure, wages too high to dominate low-cost manufacturing, a high-tech sector not yet ready to compete
with advanced economies, and a senior population that will grow by 200 million to 2050 to the equation.
Faced with such headwinds, China will be fortunate to sustain any significant economic growth in the next
two decades. At this moment, China’s economy even now is delivering meagre growth, instead of the
expected rapid post-COVID expansion.
All eyes have therefore turned to India as the “next China.” But despite some evidence, that, too, is
unlikely. India has enjoyed rapid economic growth in recent years, and its population has just overtaken that
of China. These developments have produced a burst of optimism that India will catch, or even surpass,
China’s economy.
Yet this optimism is misplaced. India’s population growth in the coming decades will come mainly from
greater life expectancy, rather than any increases in births. Just as in China, India’s crude birth rate has
plummeted in recent years. India’s fertility—the number of children an average woman will likely bear in
her lifetime—has fallen from 4 children per woman in 1990 to just 2 today. In fact, India’s total population
in the 15–24 age group—the same educated youth cohorts who will drive rapid productivity growth—
has already peaked and is projected to decline by about 15% between 2020 and 2050.
In essence, China and India’s trends reflect a global pattern. Over the next twenty years, most of the world
will face both declining youth cohorts and shrinking labor forces as they also must care for an exploding
number of seniors. With total fertility rates ranging from 1.0 to 1.3 in East Asia, from 1.5 to 1.7 in the United
States and Europe, and averaging 1.9 in Latin America, there is virtually no region of the world in which a
declining youth population and rapid aging will not be the dominant feature. This trend is also “baked in”
for the next few decades, since virtually all children who will be age 15–24 in 2040 have already been born,
as have almost all the women who will give birth over the next twenty years.
The countries that differ in regard to this trend are mainly found in Africa. Although a number of African
countries—usually smaller nations and islands such as Mauritius, Réunion Island, Cabo Verde, Saint Helena
and the Seychelles—have already lowered their fertility to at or near replacement (2.1), many of Africa’s
largest countries remain among the world’s fastest growing. Thirty-nine countries in Africa have fertility
rates of 3.0 or higher, with several above 5.0, including Nigeria (5.1), Angola (5.2), Mali (5.8), the Central
African Republic (5.9), the Democratic Republic of the Congo (6.1), and Niger (6.7). The average fertility rate
across the continent is currently 4.24 children per woman, roughly twice that of the rest of the world. The
reasons why this is so despite considerable gains in child survival and income per head, are still debated.
Woman handing out books on International Literacy Day. (Ivan Bruno de M / shutterstock.com)
The potential effects of secondary or higher education for women on fertility rates are also worth examining.
According to UNICEF, about 41% of girls across West and Central Africa marry before reaching age 18. It is
well documented that girls who complete secondary education are much less likely to marry early. In fact,
completion by all girls of secondary school would reduce child marriage by 66%. Also, the education and
earning power that women gain in school empowers them to earn more, providing a value to their family
that exceeds child-rearing. One study found that in sub-Saharan Africa, for each year of schooling completed,
women’s earnings rise by 14.5%.
Many demographers expect that universal quality secondary education on the continent may create a
dramatic decline in fertility. But, at present, African countries continue to have some of the lowest secondary
school enrollment figures in the world, especially for women. According to the World Bank, only four in
ten girls of high-school age are enrolled in secondary education throughout most of Africa. In several of
its largest countries, such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, and Tanzania, this figure
is under one-third. In Uganda, it is less than a quarter. And the poor quality of educational services also
remains a major concern. Yet this pattern can be broken—in Botswana, Gabon, Ghana, Namibia, South Africa,
While there are signs that Africa’s exceptionally high fertility may
be starting a stronger decline, the high fertility over the last several TOTAL
INCREASE: AFRICA:
decades has made Africa the world’s last great harbor of young people.
This year alone, one out of every three children born in the entire 428 412 million
(98%)
world will be born in an African country. And, as a result, one of every million
three youths in the world aged 15–24 will be an African in 2040.
It may seem like a pipe-dream to argue that Africa’s diverse 54 countries are capable of producing a pro-
ductivity miracle like that of China. But it is precisely the belief that it is a pipe-dream that could be the
greatest obstacle to realizing that growth. In 1980, the idea that China would soon surpass Japan to have
an economy not only larger than Japan, but to rival that of all of Europe or the United States, would also
have seemed ridiculous.
China’s growth is not the only evidence that rapid development can arise in unexpected places. Bangladesh
offers another example. At its independence in 1971, torn by war, impoverished, and ravaged by natural
disasters, it was dismissed by US Undersecretary of State Ural Alexis Johnson as an “international basket
case.” Yet, despite its often questionable governance (and its lack of natural and energy resources that
Africa possesses in abundance), Bangladesh has grown its GDP by five-fold in the last thirty years. Life
expectancy has leapt from 47 years at independence to 74 years today. Infant mortality plummeted from
158 per 1,000 live births in 1971 to just 26 today. If the African continent can achieve even “Bangladesh-
level” growth, a five-fold increase in its GDP over the next thirty years, that expansion would still add $15
trillion to the global economy—about the same contribution as China made from 1980 to 2020.
Such growth is not mere fantasy. From 1980 to 2020, sub-Saharan Africa has already tripled its GDP (in
constant 2015 $US), from $600 billion to $1.9 trillion. Nigeria has nearly tripled its real GDP from 2000 to
2020, while Ethiopia’s real GDP has grown five-fold. If these countries can build on this performance and
carry other African economies with them through greater regional integration, a generation of young Africans
can create a global boom.
No other region of the world is capable of producing anything like the potential growth of Africa. But there
are models to examine. East Asian countries (along with other developmental state economies like those
of Ireland and Israel) also have experienced stunning growth. They have created their own paths to it by
investing in the education and training of their youth. Yet they have also encouraged foreign investment and
prodded their own firms and innovators to compete in the global economy.
These nations provide a partial guide for African leaders to propel their economies forward. Yet Africa must
also advance in new ways to be successful. Recognizing Africa’s potential—and developing it sustainably—
is the only way the global economy can continue to achieve the growth of recent decades when China’s
development served as the primary engine of the world economy.
Relying first on coal for energy, and then on liquid and gas fossil fuel combustion, China’s economic growth
was an environmental disaster. China has polluted the air, drained aquifers, turned rivers into sewers, and
added more greenhouse gases to the air in recent years than any other country. (Fully one-quarter of global
greenhouse gas emissions—twice the total created by the United States—come from China.)
China’s growth also has made it far more difficult to achieve a “clean-up” in the time required to prevent
the planet from heating to dangerous levels. If Africa’s development were to produce another China-sized
amount of greenhouse gas emissions over the next three decades, those emissions would eclipse global
climate mitigation goals—even if China, Europe, and the United States all met their most ambitious targets
for emission reductions.
As we have seen this past summer alone, as unprecedented waves of heat and fire struck the United
States, Canada, Europe, Latin America, China (and even Antarctica), severe and costly climate shifts are
emerging faster than ever. Poorer countries will be especially hard hit, as their people and economies lack
the resources to be resilient to climate impacts. African nations are thus in a race to develop their econo-
mies before the effects of heat, drought, floods, heat-driven insect infestations, and other climate impacts
wreak further havoc on their economies.
African leaders already recognize the need for clean development. Both the Kigali Communique, (“Ensuring
a Just and Equitable Energy Transition in Africa,” signed by ten African countries in May 2022), and the
African Common Position on Energy Access and Just Transition (led by the African Union Commission)
present a vision for an energy future powered by development and job creation based on clean energy and
sustainable electricity production. The inaugural Africa Climate Summit, hosted in September of this year,
highlighted Africa’s promise as a “green industrial hub.”
Achieving that vision will take substantial resources, as well as partnerships across the continent and also
between Africa and the developed world. Today almost 80% of Africa’s electricity is generated by fossil fuels.
Few countries have begun to develop alternatives, nor is the electrical grid well suited to distribute elec-
tricity from new sources. In 2020, just five countries (South Africa, Egypt, Morocco, Algeria, and Senegal)
accounted for 87% of installed solar generating capacity in Africa. Three nations (South Africa, Egypt, and
Morocco) accounted for 83% of all wind power on the continent.
Night view of Earth’s city lights from space (berni0004 / NASA / shutterstock.com)
Fortunately, Africa’s many nations also have many paths forward. For some countries, such as Morocco
and Mali, extensive solar power development may be best. For countries with large natural gas reserves,
a longer fossil-free trajectory may require multiple steps: replacing coal-fired power plants with natural
gas, exporting gas and green hydrogen to replace coal burning power plants abroad, and replacing village
wood-burning with gas stoves. Still other countries may do best by emphasizing hydro and geothermal
power. Each nation will need to determine its own best transition to a clean energy economy based on
population, geography, and economy.
Enhanced regional integration will also be necessary to foster the supply of clean energy. Africa’s devel-
opment must be as rapid and as clean as possible, and not blocked by unrealistic constraints. Modest
increases in fossil fuel use now, when economies across the continent are relatively small, will not be
terribly harmful—and may even be vital to growth. Yet continued dependence on fossil fuels a decade or
two from now, when Africa’s economy may be five to ten times larger, must be studiously avoided. Foreign
investment and expertise also will be necessary to build a new clean-energy future. But foreign investors
who partner with Africans and African leaders must design such plans to meet African needs, as well as
develop Africans’ skill levels and ability to innovate to shape their own future.
Nothing could be more mistaken. Such attitudes face the future with eyes firmly fixed on the past, rather
than standing in the present and looking forward. In fact, Africa’s social and economic development likely
holds the key to solving many of the problems facing other countries.
One of the biggest problems for the rich world, both in terms of fiscal burdens on government and overall quality
of life, is how to provide housing, health care, and pensions for their exploding number of older citizens in a time
of shrinking workforces. Today, the United States’ Medicare and Social Security programs are forecast to
There are better solutions already being chosen by millions of seniors which take advantage of two global
trends. First, the costs of health care are nudging patients to practice “medical tourism” and have proce-
dures done abroad. Surgeons in India, Thailand, Costa Rica, and elsewhere provide much cheaper medical
care with results that rival public hospitals in the United States and United Kingdom. For example, a heart
bypass in Costa Rica costs about $27,000, compared to $123,000 in the United States.
Second, many developing countries are wooing American and European retirees, offering visas to
those who invest in property and other incentives. Retirees find they can obtain housing, food, and
various support services for a fraction of what similar amenities would cost in the United States. Already,
hundreds of thousands of Americans have retired to Panama, Ecuador, Mexico, Belize, Costa Rica, and
other developing countries with warmer climates and lower living costs.
While Europe and the United States need immigration in moderation, they fear it in excess. A moderate
flow of work migrants from Africa to the developed world will be necessary to help meet demands for
labor but uncontrolled surges of refugees (like those from Syria, Libya, and Afghanistan to Europe in the
2010s in the wake of civil wars, or from Ukraine today) can undermine trust in government and generate
nationalist xenophobia.
An additional 400 million young men and women seeking work by 2040 means that development failures
and political instability in Africa could create immense pressures for migration abroad. One of the best
investments that the world can make for its future stability and prosperity is supporting providing quality
secondary education to young men and women in Africa. This investment would produce several global
benefits: fertility would decline; more working men and women would lay a foundation for sustainable
development and a higher return on capital investments; and outmigration pressures would be reduced.
One of the most successful immigrant communities in the United States hails from Nigeria—and it has
produced professors, physicians, entrepreneurs, and business leaders in impressive numbers. At a time
when the number of young people elsewhere in the world is essentially stagnant, while Africa adds hun-
dreds of millions to the most diverse population on Earth, not ensuring quality education and opportunities
for Africans would starve the world of an immense treasure of human talent.
For centuries, outsiders have invested billions of dollars in Africa to find and refine valuable minerals not
readily found elsewhere. We are entering a future in which young people will be a scarce and fixed resource
almost everywhere except Africa. Outsiders should again invest to make a scarce resource—youth—pro-
ductive, not just for the benefit of Africa, but because it is vital to their own future.
It is true that much of the development aid provided to African countries has been wasted. But that is
in part because it has so often taken the form of projects designed to promote the personal interests of
African leaders, or foreigners, rather than bottom-up market-driven investments to serve local demands.
Other countries’ experience has shown that special economic zones, a focus on infrastructure, education,
and international competitiveness, and government that holds local officials accountable for disorder but
rewards them for presiding over economic growth can do wonders.
What is mainly needed is for African countries to work with each other through greater regional integration,
and with other regions, to create an institutional climate that attracts private investments. Charitable foun-
dations, such as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, have shown that relatively small amounts of money,
carefully spent, can produce great results in improving health. Funds to support secondary education and
improve its quality—whether from charitable foundations or governments—can pay similar dividends. Paired
We are seeing major steps in the right direction: Africa’s welcome into the G20; the progress on the
African Continental Free Trade Area; and Africa’s first climate summit held in September 2023 in Nairobi.
Yet Africa’s progress remains constrained by debt and lack of capital for green energy investments; it is
here that international support for African development remains vital.
The recent US-Africa Leaders’ Summit, held December 13-15, 2022 in Washington, D.C., produced several
useful elements of a vision for US cooperation with Africa. The Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI)
recognizes the importance of developing the potential of Africa’s youth. Support for Africa joining the G20
is welcome; funding to promote resilience, clean energy, and new rules for free trade are important; and
support for health initiatives is worthwhile.
Young African leaders participating in the first cohort of the YALI (USAID / CC BY 2.0 / flikr.com)
It is also essential that nations cooperate, and not compete, in contributing to African development. With
almost one billion Africans being added to the population in the next two decades, and a desire for quality
education, investment, and development, there are plenty of opportunities and challenges to share. A
complementary approach to assistance, perhaps with Europe taking the lead on education, the United States
on agriculture and health, China and Japan on infrastructure and job-training, the World Bank on support for
commercial, financial, and administrative infrastructure and projects, and a Green Bank on clean energy—
will provide greater progress and less waste, as long as efforts are coordinated.
Perhaps even African leaders are thinking too small. The World Bank and the leaders of several West and
Central African nations met in Accra in June 2022 to create and support a “Western and Central Africa
Education strategy.” Its goals include reducing “the inability to read and understand a simple text at age 10
from 80 percent in 2020 to 66 percent by 2030” and increasing “girls’ secondary school gross enrollment
from 43% to 57.2% by 2030.”
Major improvements in the quality of educational services are also needed. As the eminent development
economist Lant Pritchett has observed, “Schooling ain’t learning.” Today, African schools are often plagued
with high teacher absenteeism and irregular learning plans.
However, there is a revolution underway in the use of “scripted teaching,” in which teachers are provided
with hour-by-hour and day-by-day lesson plans that are proven to advance education and key skills. Much as
airplane pilots and surgeons follow detailed procedures to ensure best practice and reduce errors, so script-
ed lesson plans are proving successful in guiding teachers to utilize the most effective proven approaches
to education. Recent tests in Kenya and Nigeria have shown that such scripted lessons, distributed to
teachers on electronic tablets, produced a vast improvement in student achievement, even for the lowest
income students. They also keep teachers in schools and engaged, as teachers have to log in every day
and follow the lesson plans daily. The spread of this technology could help revolutionize education in Africa.
For too long, views of Africa have been shaped by its recent past, rather than its potential future. Global de-
mographic trends are now placing the African continent front and center as the one region that can sustain
global growth. Contributing to Africa’s development offers a host of benefits to the entire world. Working
with African leaders, innovators, and workers is a golden path to benefits for the entire global economy.
Africa demands our attention, not just to support African countries, but because it is vital for all of us.
Environmental Change
and Security Program
Lauren Herzer Risi | Director
wilsoncenter.org/ecsp
[email protected]
@newsecuritybeat
@newsecuritybeat
202.691.4000
Tanzanian children in a class at the Mawenzi Municipal Primary School in Moshi, Kilimanjaro (Alexander Gafarro/ shutterstock.com)