Bantu Gazette

Bantu Gazette
  • Energy & Trade
  • Finance
  • Health
  • Politics & Economy
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • Feature
  • Opinion
  • Changemakers
  • Tourism & Culture
  • Sports
  • Magazine
Menu
  • Black Frame Studio
  • Magazine

Owning the Value Chain Key to Africa’s Economic Growth

Local processing, regional cooperation and strategic investment are creating a path for resource exporters to capture value that has long flowed overseas.

Owning the Value Chain Key to Africa’s Economic Growth
Agemo Olubukola Miriamby Agemo Olubukola Miriam
April 19, 2025
Reading Time: 4 mins read

Owning the Value Chain Key to Africa’s Economic Growth

Local processing, regional cooperation and strategic investment are creating a path for resource exporters to capture value that has long flowed overseas.

Owning the Value Chain Key to Africa’s Economic Growth
Owning the Value Chain Key to Africa’s Economic Growth
Agemo Olubukola Miriamby Agemo Olubukola Miriam
September 1, 2025
Reading Time: 4 mins read

Cocoa, coffee, crude oil and cashew nuts make up a familiar list. Across Africa, raw materials leave ports in bulk, only to return as expensive finished goods. This extractive trade pattern has limited economic growth for decades, reducing opportunities for local industry and deepening reliance on foreign value chains.

The continent remains locked in the lowest tiers of global production systems, exposed to price shocks and bypassed by the industrial transformation seen elsewhere. African countries must focus on processing, manufacturing and building regional markets for locally made goods that retain more value at home.

From Raw Materials to Limited Return

When unprocessed exports leave African shores, the continent loses more than revenue — it loses jobs, skills and the opportunity to shape its own industries. Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire produce a significant portion of the world’s cocoa, capturing only a small fraction of the global chocolate market. Most profits go to companies in Europe and North America that handle branding, processing and distribution.

This pattern repeats across sectors. African cotton becomes fabric elsewhere. Shea nuts ship out raw instead of fueling local cosmetic manufacturing. Crude oil is refined abroad and sold back at a premium. These missed opportunities erode livelihoods, slow industrial development and drive economic migration.

Africa loses significant economic value by exporting unprocessed raw materials instead of value-added goods. While estimates vary, reports suggest this gap represents billions in lost revenue annually and missed chances to build sustainable industries that offer long-term employment.

Small Businesses Can Power the Shift

Small and medium-sized enterprises form the base of many African economies. In agriculture, textiles, cosmetics and technology, these businesses have the potential to lead transformation. Many face consistent obstacles: limited access to finance, poor product finishing and difficulty meeting certification standards for export.

These barriers stem from deeper structural problems including unreliable electricity, underdeveloped supply chains and lack of affordable credit tailored to manufacturing needs. Entrepreneurs often operate without formal collateral and remain excluded from commercial banking systems.

Support systems are essential. Financing, technical training, branding expertise and market access can help SMEs reach regional and global buyers. Rwanda’s Question Coffee and Nigeria’s Psaltry Cassava Starch illustrate what’s possible with the right backing.

Across Africa, innovative social enterprises are transforming industries by using private sector tools to create measurable change. In Ghana, Kawa Moka roasts and packages premium coffee locally, reaching both African and international consumers. In Kenya, Twiga Foods connects farmers and vendors through digital platforms that reduce waste and improve market access. In Senegal, myAgro allows smallholder farmers to save for inputs using a mobile scratch-card system.

These examples show how targeted investment, technology and local leadership can produce scalable, lasting solutions.

A Continental Market with Continental Challenges

Support for African businesses must be matched by markets that enable growth.

The African Continental Free Trade Area is one of the most ambitious trade agreements ever signed on the continent, joining more than 1.4 billion people into a single market. It promises to reduce tariffs and encourage cross-border commerce.

For the trade area to succeed, infrastructure and finance systems must improve. Roads, rail, ports and digital platforms need investment.

Trade finance must become more accessible, especially for smaller firms outside capital cities. Without these foundations, many businesses will find the legal framework insufficient.

Regional Strategies Create Opportunity

Regional coordination strengthens the economic logic behind industrialization. Ethiopia’s textile sector, supported by cotton from neighboring countries, has expanded its manufacturing base.

Morocco’s automotive growth has relied on regional integration and deliberate collaboration between government and private investors.

“When unprocessed exports leave African shores, the continent loses more than revenue — it loses jobs, skills and the opportunity to shape its own industries.”

Industrial zones, like the upcoming Badagry Agro-Industrial Zone in Nigeria, bring farmers, processors and exporters together in a single hub.

These spaces reduce post-harvest losses, improve product quality and enable smoother trade across borders. Small and medium enterprise consortia that pool resources can improve production standards and open doors to wider markets.

Southeast Asia offers valuable lessons. Vietnam transformed its economy by combining industrial policy with targeted export support, moving from agriculture to higher-value manufacturing within two decades. Africa must follow its own path, and these models show what sustained coordination can achieve.

Public Policy Must Do More 

Governments must create environments where value-added production can thrive. This includes lowering business costs, expanding reliable infrastructure, offering tax incentives and ensuring product standards. Access to long-term capital remains a major obstacle. Grant funding, flexible credit and patient investment are critical for building industries with staying power.

Support networks also matter. Business associations, chambers of commerce and diaspora communities can help match suppliers with buyers and promote confidence in African-made goods.

Changing mindsets is part of the challenge. African consumers need to trust and value domestic products. Building strong local brands that reflect cultural identity and meet high quality standards can shift demand and strengthen economic resilience from within.

A Model Built on African Terms

Africa’s dependence on raw exports continues to constrain growth. Local processing and intra-continental trade offer a path toward greater prosperity.

The necessary pieces are emerging. The African Continental Free Trade Area provides the foundation. Regional supply chains are expanding. Ambitious small and medium enterprises are ready to scale. What’s needed now is political will to act, long-term investment to sustain the transition and a shared vision that prioritizes ownership of African value.

The future of African trade rests on the ability to transform resources at home and build value within the continent.

 


Agemo Olubukola Miriam


Agemo Olubukola Miriam
is the Director of Government Affairs at the Badagry Chamber of Commerce in Nigeria, where she leads strategic government relations, policy advocacy initiatives, and economic empowerment programs for local
businesses and cross-border traders.

Get the inside Story

Stay informed on the stories shaping Africa’s future. Get breaking news, in-depth analysis, opinions and exclusive insights from across the continent delivered to your inbox, free and unfiltered.


Get in touch for more:
Felix Tih
Editorial Director, Bantu Gazette
WhatsApp
LinkedIn
X (Twitter)
Instagram

Related Posts

Bantu Gazette
Opinion

Africa Is Speaking for Itself

May 29, 2026
African Capital Must Lead Before Foreign Investment Will Follow
Opinion

African Capital Must Lead Before Foreign Investment Will Follow

May 8, 2026
As Africa Asserts Resource Sovereignty, Europe Responds with Fortified Borders
Opinion

As Africa Asserts Resource Sovereignty, Europe Responds with Fortified Borders

April 7, 2026
African Leaders Must Rewire Their Strategic Thinking to Unlock AfCFTA’s Full Potential
Opinion

African Leaders Must Rewire Their Strategic Thinking to Unlock AfCFTA’s Full Potential

April 2, 2026
Beyond Applause at Davos, Africa Demands Action
Opinion

Beyond Applause at Davos, Africa Demands Action

February 7, 2026
The Weaver Bird Strategy: How Small States Are Building Intra-African Trade
Opinion

The Weaver Bird Strategy: How Small States Are Building Intra-African Trade

February 11, 2026

Most Recent

Madagascar Secures $68 Million for Economic and Governance Reforms
Finance

Madagascar Secures $68 Million for Economic and Governance Reforms

by Bantu Gazette
May 29, 2026
0

ANTANANARIVO, Madagascar Madagascar has secured $68 million in concessional financing to support a new phase of economic and governance reforms...

Read moreDetails
Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

May 29, 2026
Ethiopia Clears Fourth Review as Economic Reforms Exceed Targets

All Eyes on Ethiopia as Seventh General Election Approaches

May 29, 2026
Ethiopia Demands Action-Oriented Shift in Global Climate Finance Ahead of COP32

Ethiopia Demands Action-Oriented Shift in Global Climate Finance Ahead of COP32

May 29, 2026
Republic of Congo Goes Visa-Free for All Africans Starting January 2027

Republic of Congo Goes Visa-Free for All Africans Starting January 2027

May 26, 2026
Senegal Appoints New Prime Minister as Faye Moves to Contain Fiscal Crisis

Senegal Appoints New Prime Minister as Faye Moves to Contain Fiscal Crisis

May 29, 2026
Namibia President Calls for Preservation of Cultural Heritage

Namibia President Calls for Preservation of Cultural Heritage

May 29, 2026
Madagascar Secures $68 Million for Economic and Governance Reforms
Finance

Madagascar Secures $68 Million for Economic and Governance Reforms

by Bantu Gazette
Reading Time: 2 mins read
May 29, 2026
0

ANTANANARIVO, Madagascar Madagascar has secured $68 million in concessional financing to support a new phase of economic and governance reforms...

Read moreDetails
Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy
Politics & Economy

Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

by Samira Benhadda
Reading Time: 2 mins read
May 29, 2026
0

African Development Bank's 2025 Industrialization Index ranks Morocco first on the continent, citing export diversification and sustained industrial policy reforms,...

Read moreDetails
Ethiopia Clears Fourth Review as Economic Reforms Exceed Targets
Politics & Economy

All Eyes on Ethiopia as Seventh General Election Approaches

by Kalkidan Negash
Reading Time: 4 mins read
May 29, 2026
0

African Union and IGAD observer missions are monitoring Ethiopia’s seventh general election as more than 50.5 million registered voters prepare...

Read moreDetails

Owning the Value Chain Key to Africa’s Economic Growth

Local processing, regional cooperation and strategic investment are creating a path for resource exporters to capture value that has long flowed overseas.

Owning the Value Chain Key to Africa’s Economic Growth

Cocoa, coffee, crude oil and cashew nuts make up a familiar list. Across Africa, raw materials leave ports in bulk, only to return as expensive finished goods. This extractive trade pattern has limited economic growth for decades, reducing opportunities for local industry and deepening reliance on foreign value chains.

The continent remains locked in the lowest tiers of global production systems, exposed to price shocks and bypassed by the industrial transformation seen elsewhere. African countries must focus on processing, manufacturing and building regional markets for locally made goods that retain more value at home.

From Raw Materials to Limited Return

When unprocessed exports leave African shores, the continent loses more than revenue — it loses jobs, skills and the opportunity to shape its own industries. Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire produce a significant portion of the world’s cocoa, capturing only a small fraction of the global chocolate market. Most profits go to companies in Europe and North America that handle branding, processing and distribution.

This pattern repeats across sectors. African cotton becomes fabric elsewhere. Shea nuts ship out raw instead of fueling local cosmetic manufacturing. Crude oil is refined abroad and sold back at a premium. These missed opportunities erode livelihoods, slow industrial development and drive economic migration.

Africa loses significant economic value by exporting unprocessed raw materials instead of value-added goods. While estimates vary, reports suggest this gap represents billions in lost revenue annually and missed chances to build sustainable industries that offer long-term employment.

Small Businesses Can Power the Shift

Small and medium-sized enterprises form the base of many African economies. In agriculture, textiles, cosmetics and technology, these businesses have the potential to lead transformation. Many face consistent obstacles: limited access to finance, poor product finishing and difficulty meeting certification standards for export.

These barriers stem from deeper structural problems including unreliable electricity, underdeveloped supply chains and lack of affordable credit tailored to manufacturing needs. Entrepreneurs often operate without formal collateral and remain excluded from commercial banking systems.

Support systems are essential. Financing, technical training, branding expertise and market access can help SMEs reach regional and global buyers. Rwanda’s Question Coffee and Nigeria’s Psaltry Cassava Starch illustrate what’s possible with the right backing.

Across Africa, innovative social enterprises are transforming industries by using private sector tools to create measurable change. In Ghana, Kawa Moka roasts and packages premium coffee locally, reaching both African and international consumers. In Kenya, Twiga Foods connects farmers and vendors through digital platforms that reduce waste and improve market access. In Senegal, myAgro allows smallholder farmers to save for inputs using a mobile scratch-card system.

These examples show how targeted investment, technology and local leadership can produce scalable, lasting solutions.

A Continental Market with Continental Challenges

Support for African businesses must be matched by markets that enable growth.

The African Continental Free Trade Area is one of the most ambitious trade agreements ever signed on the continent, joining more than 1.4 billion people into a single market. It promises to reduce tariffs and encourage cross-border commerce.

For the trade area to succeed, infrastructure and finance systems must improve. Roads, rail, ports and digital platforms need investment.

Trade finance must become more accessible, especially for smaller firms outside capital cities. Without these foundations, many businesses will find the legal framework insufficient.

Regional Strategies Create Opportunity

Regional coordination strengthens the economic logic behind industrialization. Ethiopia’s textile sector, supported by cotton from neighboring countries, has expanded its manufacturing base.

Morocco’s automotive growth has relied on regional integration and deliberate collaboration between government and private investors.

“When unprocessed exports leave African shores, the continent loses more than revenue — it loses jobs, skills and the opportunity to shape its own industries.”

Industrial zones, like the upcoming Badagry Agro-Industrial Zone in Nigeria, bring farmers, processors and exporters together in a single hub.

These spaces reduce post-harvest losses, improve product quality and enable smoother trade across borders. Small and medium enterprise consortia that pool resources can improve production standards and open doors to wider markets.

Southeast Asia offers valuable lessons. Vietnam transformed its economy by combining industrial policy with targeted export support, moving from agriculture to higher-value manufacturing within two decades. Africa must follow its own path, and these models show what sustained coordination can achieve.

Public Policy Must Do More 

Governments must create environments where value-added production can thrive. This includes lowering business costs, expanding reliable infrastructure, offering tax incentives and ensuring product standards. Access to long-term capital remains a major obstacle. Grant funding, flexible credit and patient investment are critical for building industries with staying power.

Support networks also matter. Business associations, chambers of commerce and diaspora communities can help match suppliers with buyers and promote confidence in African-made goods.

Changing mindsets is part of the challenge. African consumers need to trust and value domestic products. Building strong local brands that reflect cultural identity and meet high quality standards can shift demand and strengthen economic resilience from within.

A Model Built on African Terms

Africa’s dependence on raw exports continues to constrain growth. Local processing and intra-continental trade offer a path toward greater prosperity.

The necessary pieces are emerging. The African Continental Free Trade Area provides the foundation. Regional supply chains are expanding. Ambitious small and medium enterprises are ready to scale. What’s needed now is political will to act, long-term investment to sustain the transition and a shared vision that prioritizes ownership of African value.

The future of African trade rests on the ability to transform resources at home and build value within the continent.

 


Agemo Olubukola Miriam


Agemo Olubukola Miriam
is the Director of Government Affairs at the Badagry Chamber of Commerce in Nigeria, where she leads strategic government relations, policy advocacy initiatives, and economic empowerment programs for local
businesses and cross-border traders.

Owning the Value Chain Key to Africa’s Economic Growth

Local processing, regional cooperation and strategic investment are creating a path for resource exporters to capture value that has long flowed overseas.

Owning the Value Chain Key to Africa’s Economic Growth
Agemo Olubukola Miriamby Agemo Olubukola Miriam
April 19, 2025

Cocoa, coffee, crude oil and cashew nuts make up a familiar list. Across Africa, raw materials leave ports in bulk, only to return as expensive finished goods. This extractive trade pattern has limited economic growth for decades, reducing opportunities for local industry and deepening reliance on foreign value chains.

The continent remains locked in the lowest tiers of global production systems, exposed to price shocks and bypassed by the industrial transformation seen elsewhere. African countries must focus on processing, manufacturing and building regional markets for locally made goods that retain more value at home.

From Raw Materials to Limited Return

When unprocessed exports leave African shores, the continent loses more than revenue — it loses jobs, skills and the opportunity to shape its own industries. Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire produce a significant portion of the world’s cocoa, capturing only a small fraction of the global chocolate market. Most profits go to companies in Europe and North America that handle branding, processing and distribution.

This pattern repeats across sectors. African cotton becomes fabric elsewhere. Shea nuts ship out raw instead of fueling local cosmetic manufacturing. Crude oil is refined abroad and sold back at a premium. These missed opportunities erode livelihoods, slow industrial development and drive economic migration.

Africa loses significant economic value by exporting unprocessed raw materials instead of value-added goods. While estimates vary, reports suggest this gap represents billions in lost revenue annually and missed chances to build sustainable industries that offer long-term employment.

Small Businesses Can Power the Shift

Small and medium-sized enterprises form the base of many African economies. In agriculture, textiles, cosmetics and technology, these businesses have the potential to lead transformation. Many face consistent obstacles: limited access to finance, poor product finishing and difficulty meeting certification standards for export.

These barriers stem from deeper structural problems including unreliable electricity, underdeveloped supply chains and lack of affordable credit tailored to manufacturing needs. Entrepreneurs often operate without formal collateral and remain excluded from commercial banking systems.

Support systems are essential. Financing, technical training, branding expertise and market access can help SMEs reach regional and global buyers. Rwanda’s Question Coffee and Nigeria’s Psaltry Cassava Starch illustrate what’s possible with the right backing.

Across Africa, innovative social enterprises are transforming industries by using private sector tools to create measurable change. In Ghana, Kawa Moka roasts and packages premium coffee locally, reaching both African and international consumers. In Kenya, Twiga Foods connects farmers and vendors through digital platforms that reduce waste and improve market access. In Senegal, myAgro allows smallholder farmers to save for inputs using a mobile scratch-card system.

These examples show how targeted investment, technology and local leadership can produce scalable, lasting solutions.

A Continental Market with Continental Challenges

Support for African businesses must be matched by markets that enable growth.

The African Continental Free Trade Area is one of the most ambitious trade agreements ever signed on the continent, joining more than 1.4 billion people into a single market. It promises to reduce tariffs and encourage cross-border commerce.

For the trade area to succeed, infrastructure and finance systems must improve. Roads, rail, ports and digital platforms need investment.

Trade finance must become more accessible, especially for smaller firms outside capital cities. Without these foundations, many businesses will find the legal framework insufficient.

Regional Strategies Create Opportunity

Regional coordination strengthens the economic logic behind industrialization. Ethiopia’s textile sector, supported by cotton from neighboring countries, has expanded its manufacturing base.

Morocco’s automotive growth has relied on regional integration and deliberate collaboration between government and private investors.

“When unprocessed exports leave African shores, the continent loses more than revenue — it loses jobs, skills and the opportunity to shape its own industries.”

Industrial zones, like the upcoming Badagry Agro-Industrial Zone in Nigeria, bring farmers, processors and exporters together in a single hub.

These spaces reduce post-harvest losses, improve product quality and enable smoother trade across borders. Small and medium enterprise consortia that pool resources can improve production standards and open doors to wider markets.

Southeast Asia offers valuable lessons. Vietnam transformed its economy by combining industrial policy with targeted export support, moving from agriculture to higher-value manufacturing within two decades. Africa must follow its own path, and these models show what sustained coordination can achieve.

Public Policy Must Do More 

Governments must create environments where value-added production can thrive. This includes lowering business costs, expanding reliable infrastructure, offering tax incentives and ensuring product standards. Access to long-term capital remains a major obstacle. Grant funding, flexible credit and patient investment are critical for building industries with staying power.

Support networks also matter. Business associations, chambers of commerce and diaspora communities can help match suppliers with buyers and promote confidence in African-made goods.

Changing mindsets is part of the challenge. African consumers need to trust and value domestic products. Building strong local brands that reflect cultural identity and meet high quality standards can shift demand and strengthen economic resilience from within.

A Model Built on African Terms

Africa’s dependence on raw exports continues to constrain growth. Local processing and intra-continental trade offer a path toward greater prosperity.

The necessary pieces are emerging. The African Continental Free Trade Area provides the foundation. Regional supply chains are expanding. Ambitious small and medium enterprises are ready to scale. What’s needed now is political will to act, long-term investment to sustain the transition and a shared vision that prioritizes ownership of African value.

The future of African trade rests on the ability to transform resources at home and build value within the continent.

 


Agemo Olubukola Miriam


Agemo Olubukola Miriam
is the Director of Government Affairs at the Badagry Chamber of Commerce in Nigeria, where she leads strategic government relations, policy advocacy initiatives, and economic empowerment programs for local
businesses and cross-border traders.

Get the inside Story

Stay informed on the stories shaping Africa’s future. Get breaking news, in-depth analysis, opinions and exclusive insights from across the continent delivered to your inbox, free and unfiltered.


Get in touch for more:
Felix Tih
Editorial Director, Bantu Gazette
WhatsApp
LinkedIn
X (Twitter)
Instagram

Related Posts

Bantu Gazette

Africa Is Speaking for Itself

by Felix Tih
May 25, 2026
0

...

African Capital Must Lead Before Foreign Investment Will Follow

African Capital Must Lead Before Foreign Investment Will Follow

by Felix Tih
May 8, 2026
0

...

As Africa Asserts Resource Sovereignty, Europe Responds with Fortified Borders

As Africa Asserts Resource Sovereignty, Europe Responds with Fortified Borders

by Monica Brown
April 6, 2026
0

...

African Leaders Must Rewire Their Strategic Thinking to Unlock AfCFTA’s Full Potential

African Leaders Must Rewire Their Strategic Thinking to Unlock AfCFTA’s Full Potential

by Monica Brown
April 2, 2026
0

...

Beyond Applause at Davos, Africa Demands Action

Beyond Applause at Davos, Africa Demands Action

by Monica Brown
January 28, 2026
0

...

The Weaver Bird Strategy: How Small States Are Building Intra-African Trade

The Weaver Bird Strategy: How Small States Are Building Intra-African Trade

by Bukelwa Maphanga
December 24, 2025
0

...

Madagascar Secures $68 Million for Economic and Governance Reforms
Finance

Madagascar Secures $68 Million for Economic and Governance Reforms

by Bantu Gazette
Reading Time: 2 mins read
May 29, 2026
0

ANTANANARIVO, Madagascar Madagascar has secured $68 million in concessional financing to support a new phase of economic and governance reforms...

Read moreDetails
Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

Morocco Overtakes South Africa as Africa’s Leading Industrial Economy

by Samira Benhadda
May 29, 2026
0

African Development Bank's 2025 Industrialization Index ranks Morocco first on the continent, citing export diversification and sustained industrial policy reforms,...

Ethiopia Clears Fourth Review as Economic Reforms Exceed Targets

All Eyes on Ethiopia as Seventh General Election Approaches

by Kalkidan Negash
May 29, 2026
0

African Union and IGAD observer missions are monitoring Ethiopia’s seventh general election as more than 50.5 million registered voters prepare...

Ethiopia Demands Action-Oriented Shift in Global Climate Finance Ahead of COP32

Ethiopia Demands Action-Oriented Shift in Global Climate Finance Ahead of COP32

by Kalkidan Negash
May 27, 2026
0

With COP32 one year away and set to be hosted in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia is making the case that Africa...

Republic of Congo Goes Visa-Free for All Africans Starting January 2027

Republic of Congo Goes Visa-Free for All Africans Starting January 2027

by Marina Bisse
May 26, 2026
0

President Denis Sassou-N'Guesso made the announcement on Africa Day in Brazzaville as the African Development Bank opened its annual meetings...

Next Post
Young Innovators Are Ready : What it will take to scale youth-led solutions across the continent

Young Innovators Are Ready : What it will take to scale youth-led solutions across the continent

Young Innovators Are Ready : What it will take to scale youth-led solutions across the continent

The Weight of Success: How Africa's Trade Future Can Break Family Cycles

Coding Our Own Future Ending digital dependency starts with mental sovereignty - Bantu Gazette

Coding Our Own Future: Ending digital dependency starts with mental sovereignty

En Côte d’Ivoire, le FEMUA bat son plein autour du civisme et de la musique urbaine

En Côte d’Ivoire, le FEMUA bat son plein autour du civisme et de la musique urbaine

Bantu Gazette is a pioneering news platform that champions Africa's development, culture, and heritage. We spotlight the continent's successes, address its challenges, and provide insightful coverage of events that shape its future.

Bantu Gazette is a pioneering news platform that champions Africa's development, culture, and heritage. We spotlight the continent's successes, address its challenges, and provide insightful coverage of events that shape its future.

Our Platforms

  • Bantu Magazine
  • Bantu Brief
  • Black Frame Studio

Our Services

  • Bantu Agency
  • Advertise
  • Partnerships

Our Services

  • Editorial Director
  • Opportunities
  • Contact

Bantu Gazette is a pioneering news platform that champions Africa's development, culture, and heritage. We spotlight the continent's successes, address its challenges, and provide insightful coverage of events that shape its future.

Our Platforms

  • Bantu Magazine
  • Bantu Brief
  • Black Frame Studio

Our Services

  • Bantu Agency
  • Advertise
  • Partnerships

Our Services

  • Editorial Director
  • Opportunities
  • Contact
Bantu Gazette
  • Energy & Trade
  • Finance
  • Health
  • Politics & Economy
  • Technology
  • Environment
  • Feature
  • Opinion
  • Changemakers
  • Tourism & Culture
  • Magazine