09/05/2026
Across Africa, more governments are quietly shifting toward domestic borrowing as global debt markets become tighter, more expensive, and more demanding.
Nigeria.
Angola.
Kenya.
And many others will increasingly face the same pressure.
But there is a major economic consequence that cannot be ignored:
When governments borrow heavily locally, they compete directly with the private sector for liquidity.
That means the same banking system expected to finance:
- SMEs,
- manufacturers,
- agriculture,
- logistics,
- housing,
- trade,
- healthcare,
- startups,
- and industrial expansion
is increasingly financing government deficits instead.
Banks naturally move toward the safer borrower.
And government paper is often safer, easier, and more predictable than financing productive but riskier businesses.
The result is what economists call:
«crowding out.»
But on the ground it simply feels like:
- fewer loans,
- slower approvals,
- higher borrowing costs,
- reduced working capital,
- slower expansion,
- weaker production,
- fewer jobs,
- and lower economic momentum.
This is why Africa cannot sustainably debt-recycle its way into prosperity.
At some point, growth must increasingly come from:
- production,
- industrialization,
- exports,
- value addition,
- energy,
- infrastructure efficiency,
- and enabling the private sector to grow aggressively.
Because the private sector is not the side economy.
It is the production engine that ultimately:
- creates jobs,
- generates taxes,
- builds industries,
- grows exports,
- and expands GDP.
The deeper danger is this:
If governments absorb too much domestic liquidity for too long, economies risk slowing exactly where growth is supposed to come from.
Africa’s future depends not only on managing debt better —
but on building economies productive enough to rely less on debt altogether.
The Thinking Rhino 🦏 | ONAGI ODOTE