Founder and chairman of the Centre for Policy Research AFRICA, an organization focused on evidence-based strategies for sustainable development and youth empowerment across Africa
From renewable energy startups in Kenya to fintech solutions in Nigeria, young Africans are designing tomorrow’s answers to today’s challenges. For every breakthrough that captures headlines, dozens of promising innovations remain trapped in pilot phases, starved of the resources and support systems needed to reach their full potential.
The statistics tell a sobering story. According to the International Labour Organization, young women in sub-Saharan Africa face unemployment rates that consistently exceed those of their male counterparts. In 2023, the gender gap widened further with roughly one in four young women finding themselves neither employed nor in education or training, compared to one in six young men. Behind these numbers lies untapped potential with brilliant minds whose innovations could reshape entire industries if given the chance.
The paradox remains stark. While Africa’s youth represent the continent’s greatest asset, structural barriers continue to block their path to meaningful economic participation. Young women face the steepest obstacles, encountering everything from limited access to capital to cultural biases that question their technical capabilities.
Rwanda’s deliberate investments in digital infrastructure have opened new pathways for women entering science, technology, engineering and mathematics fields. The results speak for themselves with young Rwandan women now launching tech companies at unprecedented rates. Across much of the continent, similar talent remains sidelined by systems that weren’t designed with inclusion in mind.
The momentum is already building. Zimbabwe’s Econet Wireless has demonstrated how mobile and financial services can transform underserved communities through innovations like EcoCash. In South Africa, SweepSouth built a platform connecting domestic workers with clients, providing thousands of women access to more flexible, better-paying opportunities. These success stories emerged from environments that provided the essential building blocks with access to capital, mentorship networks, and markets ready to embrace new solutions.
Strengthening this environment involves action in five main areas with education, access to finance, networking opportunities, a culture that values innovation, and increased engagement from the private sector. Prioritizing science and entrepreneurship education, expanding access to funding and mentorship, creating collaborative spaces and safeguarding intellectual property all play a role in building that foundation. Government involvement remains important, while more consistent participation from the private sector is necessary to expand reach and sustainability.
Industrial strategies that ignore gender disparities will inevitably underperform. Supporting childcare services, encouraging women’s leadership, and ensuring fair compensation are economic imperatives alongside matters of equity. Similarly, commitment to environmentally conscious industrialization, including renewable energy and circular economic practices, ensures that today’s solutions don’t become tomorrow’s problems.
The path forward requires policy frameworks that respond to realities on the ground rather than importing solutions designed for different contexts. What works in Silicon Valley may differ from what succeeds in Lagos or Johannesburg, while the underlying principles of access, support, and systematic thinking remain universal.
Without targeted intervention, Africa’s demographic dividend risks becoming a demographic burden. Young people excluded from meaningful economic participation don’t simply disappear as they find other outlets for their energy and ambition. The choice remains straightforward with investing in youth innovation now or paying the higher costs of exclusion later.
The work of organizations like the Centre for Policy Research AFRICA demonstrates that deliberate efforts to empower young innovators can reshape entire economies. Such efforts must scale beyond individual organizations to become systematic priorities for governments, businesses, and civil society.
Africa’s young innovators are ready. The question remains whether the continent will build the infrastructure to support them. The answer will determine individual futures alongside the trajectory of African development for generations to come.
The time for half-measures has passed. Africa’s innovation ecosystem needs comprehensive support that matches the scale of its potential. Young innovators have shown they can create solutions and now the continent must create the conditions for those solutions to thrive.