Introduction: A Surge That Demands Scrutiny
In the first half of 2025, Chinese firms signed over $30 billion in construction contracts across Africa, a dramatic increase from the previous year.
The scale is significant. So is the implication.
Africa urgently needs infrastructure. China is delivering it at speed and scale.
But this raises a deeper question: Is Africa building long-term capacity, or long-term dependency?
1. The Reality: Infrastructure Demand Is Immediate
Africa’s infrastructure gap remains one of the largest in the world.
- Power shortages limit industrial growth
- Weak transport networks increase the cost of trade
- Urban expansion is outpacing basic services
Governments need partners who can:
- Mobilize capital quickly
- Execute large-scale projects
- Deliver within tight timelines
Chinese firms have proven capable of doing all three.
2. Why China Has Become the Dominant Builder
China’s position in African infrastructure is not accidental. It is structural.
Key advantages include:
- Access to state-backed financing
- Integrated delivery models (finance, design, build)
- Experience in large-scale infrastructure execution
- Speed compared to traditional procurement processes
For many African governments, this combination makes Chinese partnerships highly attractive.
3. The Case for “Building Infrastructure”
There is a strong argument that these partnerships are delivering real value:
- Roads, railways, and energy projects are being completed
- Logistics costs are reduced
- Trade connectivity improves
- Economic activity is enabled
In many cases, infrastructure that might have taken decades is being delivered within years.
From this perspective, the focus is not on who builds, but on what gets built.
4. The Case for “Building Dependency”
Concerns arise when examining the structure behind these projects.
Key issues include:
- Reliance on external financing tied to specific contractors
- Limited local participation in high-value project segments
- Debt obligations linked to infrastructure development
- Technology and skills not always fully transferred
When projects are financed, built, and sometimes operated externally, local capacity development can lag behind physical construction.
5. Where the Line Is Drawn
The distinction between building infrastructure and building dependency lies in how projects are structured, not just who delivers them.
The line becomes clearer when asking:
- Are local firms meaningfully involved?
- Is there transfer of skills and technology?
- Are financing terms sustainable?
- Does the project generate long-term economic value?
If the answer is yes, infrastructure is being built. If not, dependency risks increase.
6. The Role of African Governments
Governments play a decisive role in shaping outcomes.
Strategic approaches include:
- Negotiating stronger local content requirements
- Structuring deals to ensure knowledge transfer
- Diversifying funding sources
- Strengthening procurement frameworks
The difference between dependency and development often lies in negotiation and policy design.
7. The Opportunity for African Businesses
This dynamic also highlights a gap for local entrepreneurs and firms.
Currently:
- Large portions of infrastructure value chains are externally controlled
- Local businesses often participate at lower levels (subcontracting, labour)
However, there is opportunity to:
- Move into project development and advisory roles
- Build capacity in engineering and specialized services
- Partner with international firms at higher levels of the value chain
The challenge is not just external dominance, it is internal under-participation.
8. Diversification Is Increasing
China is not the only player.
Other partners are becoming more active, including:
- Multilateral institutions
- Private investors
- Regional development banks
This diversification can reduce dependency risk, but only if African stakeholders actively engage with multiple financing and delivery models.
9. A Transitional Phase, Not a Final State
Africa’s current infrastructure model may reflect a transitional phase.
In early stages of development, external expertise and capital often play a larger role. Over time, successful economies shift toward:
- Greater local participation
- Stronger domestic firms
- More balanced partnerships
The key question is whether Africa is moving along that trajectory.
Conclusion: The Answer Is Not Binary
Africa is both building infrastructure and facing the risk of dependency.
The outcome is not predetermined. It depends on:
- How deals are structured
- How much value is retained locally
- How effectively capacity is developed
Infrastructure alone does not guarantee development. Ownership, participation, and capability do.
Call to Action
Infrastructure partnerships must be approached with long-term strategy, not short-term urgency.
Governments, investors, and businesses should prioritize structures that promote local participation, sustainable financing, and knowledge transfer across Africa.
Build with intention. Negotiate with clarity. Develop capacity alongside infrastructure.

