- Young Entrepreneurs Drive AfCFTA Beyond Policy Into Economic Reality
Africa’s ambitious push toward continental economic integration is increasingly being shaped not only by policymakers, trade negotiators and regional institutions, but by a rising generation of entrepreneurs building the digital and commercial infrastructure needed to make cross-border trade work in practice.
The African Continental Free Trade Area, AfCFTA, which brings together a market of more than 1.3 billion people with a combined economic output exceeding US$3.4 trillion, has long been described as one of the continent’s most important economic projects.
Its promise is clear: deeper intra-African trade, stronger industrial value chains, expanded investment flows, larger markets for local producers and a pathway toward reducing Africa’s dependence on raw commodity exports.
Yet, beyond the legal framework and policy declarations, analysts say the true success of the agreement will depend on whether African businesses can transact, move goods, receive payments, access customers and build partnerships across borders with less friction.
Increasingly, that practical work is being led by entrepreneurs.
Across the continent, startups and technology-driven enterprises are developing solutions to some of the barriers that have historically limited intra-African trade. These include fragmented payment systems, costly currency conversions, weak logistics networks, inefficient border processes, limited access to trade finance and poor market information.
Digital payment platforms, logistics technology companies, online marketplaces and business-to-business trade platforms are beginning to connect African producers and consumers beyond domestic markets. For small and medium-sized enterprises, these platforms offer an opportunity to reach regional customers without necessarily building expensive physical networks in each country.
The shift is gradually changing how regional trade is understood. AfCFTA is no longer only about tariff schedules, rules of origin and government-level negotiations. It is also about the emergence of private-sector systems that allow a shea butter producer in Ghana, a textile trader in Nigeria, a software developer in Kenya or an agro-processor in Rwanda to serve customers across multiple African markets.
One of the most important institutional developments supporting this momentum is the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System, PAPSS, which is designed to facilitate cross-border transactions in local African currencies and reduce dependence on external payment channels.
For businesses, the significance of such systems lies in their ability to reduce currency conversion costs, shorten settlement timelines and make regional trade less dependent on hard currency availability. In a continent where dollar liquidity, exchange-rate volatility and correspondent banking constraints often disrupt trade, payment innovation could become central to AfCFTA’s commercial success.
Observers describe these emerging systems as Africa’s “invisible infrastructure”: the digital, financial and logistics networks that may not be as visible as roads, ports or railways, but are increasingly essential to the movement of goods, services and capital.
Development experts have argued that successful implementation of AfCFTA could significantly expand intra-African trade and support poverty reduction over the next decade. However, they caution that those gains will not materialize automatically. They will require functioning systems that allow businesses, especially SMEs, to participate meaningfully in regional commerce.
Sudan has emerged as an unexpected example of entrepreneurial adaptation under pressure.
Despite prolonged conflict, economic disruption and damage to physical infrastructure, many Sudanese entrepreneurs have increasingly turned to digital business models, remote service delivery and cross-border commercial operations to sustain access to regional markets.
Analysts say the crisis has forced some businesses to think beyond domestic survival. Entrepreneurs have had to build networks across borders, serve clients in multiple jurisdictions and rely more heavily on digital channels to stay connected to suppliers, customers and financial partners.
The broader trend is also visible in stronger African technology ecosystems such as Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana, Egypt, South Africa and Rwanda, where startups are playing a growing role in improving regional connectivity.
In these markets, digital companies are not merely serving local consumers. Many are designing platforms with regional scale in mind from the beginning. That shift is important because AfCFTA’s value lies in scale. A company that can solve a logistics, payment or market-access problem in one country may be able to replicate that solution across several African economies.
Africa’s demographic profile is expected to reinforce this transformation. With the world’s youngest population and a median age of about 19 years, the continent is producing a generation of entrepreneurs whose commercial outlook is less constrained by national borders than previous generations.
Young African founders are increasingly building businesses around mobility, digital finance, e-commerce, creative services, agritech, logistics and professional services. Many of these sectors are naturally cross-border in character and align closely with the market-opening ambitions of AfCFTA.
For investors, this shift is beginning to reshape perceptions of opportunity across the continent.
Rather than viewing African markets as isolated national economies, investors are increasingly looking at businesses that can connect multiple markets at once. Platforms that facilitate payments, logistics, compliance, trade documentation, digital identity, cross-border settlement and market access are attracting attention because they sit at the centre of Africa’s integration agenda.
Analysts argue that Africa’s next major economic opportunity may lie not only in growth itself, but in integration. The most valuable businesses may be those that reduce the friction that prevents African economies from trading more with one another.
However, experts caution that entrepreneurs cannot carry the AfCFTA project alone.
Governments must accelerate reforms that allow innovation to scale across borders. Key priorities include harmonising digital trade regulations, improving customs interoperability, strengthening cybersecurity cooperation, modernising digital identity systems and easing the movement of capital, talent and innovation across African markets.
There is also a need to improve access to finance for startups and SMEs building regional trade infrastructure. Without patient capital, many promising companies may struggle to expand beyond their home markets.
Policy consistency will also be critical. If businesses face different licensing rules, tax treatment, data requirements and payment restrictions in every country, the cost of regional expansion will remain high.
AfCFTA has created the legal and institutional foundation for a more integrated Africa. But the real test now lies in implementation.
While governments negotiate protocols and regional institutions build frameworks, entrepreneurs are increasingly becoming the practical architects of continental integration. They are creating the platforms, payment rails, logistics channels and digital marketplaces that can turn policy ambition into daily commercial activity.
For Africa, the lesson is clear. AfCFTA will not succeed only because governments signed an agreement. It will succeed if businesses can use that agreement to trade, invest, employ, innovate and scale across borders.
In that process, the continent’s young entrepreneurs may prove to be the decisive force that moves AfCFTA from policy promise to economic reality.
