According to www.thehabarinetwork.com, multilateral development banks now account for more than half of Africa’s net financial flows — a 124 percent increase fueling one of the continent’s most consequential infrastructure buildouts. With the Africa Finance Corporation’s recent “A” credit rating lowering capital costs, physical investment momentum is unprecedented. Yet as Ziad Hamoui warns in his March 23, 2026 analysis, the real bottleneck lies not in roads or rails — but in the underfunded, invisible systems governing cross-border trade.
The Soft Infrastructure Gap
The Trade Law Centre’s latest AfCFTA ratification update shows that more than half of the 49 Party States cannot yet trade preferentially, because their tariff schedules remain unfinished. This is not a geopolitical failure — it is a soft infrastructure failure: non-integrated customs systems, absent rules-of-origin databases, and undertrained border agents create chokepoints equivalent to collapsed bridges — but with far less public urgency.
Three Pillars of Industrialization
Ghana’s Deputy Minister for Energy, Richard Gyan-Mensah, framed industrialization around three pillars: reliable energy, resilient physical infrastructure, and efficient trade systems. The third pillar — encompassing digital trade platforms, harmonized documentation, border-agent training, and National Trade Facilitation Committees — is consistently underfunded and underappreciated.
“Industrialization, he argued, rests on three pillars: reliable energy, resilient physical infrastructure, and efficient trade systems.” — Richard Gyan-Mensah, Deputy Minister for Energy, Ghana
Border Instability and Economic Lifelines
Rising tensions along the Guinea-Liberia-Sierra Leone border triangle — recently flagged by the ECOWAS Commission — reveal how quickly political friction cascades into supply chain collapse. Perishable goods spoil; women traders (who form the backbone of cross-border commerce across much of West Africa) lose income overnight; transport operators face paralyzing uncertainty about vehicle passage. Local border-town economies — built entirely on trade — begin to collapse inward.
As Hamoui stated at the Africa Resilience Forum in Abidjan: “The relationship between economic hardship and instability is not theoretical — it is operational. When livelihoods disappear at border communities, those communities become recruiting grounds for armed groups and pressure valves for smuggling networks and irregular migration.”
Toward Integrated Action
Sustainable peace in border zones requires three simultaneous commitments:
- Ensuring trade and transport continue uninterrupted while diplomatic tensions are managed
- Establishing joint border management structures to build institutional trust over time
- Investing directly in border infrastructure — warehouses, digital customs terminals, trader associations — to create tangible economic interdependence
The Mano River Union and AfCFTA frameworks contain the necessary legal protocols. The gap is not in architecture — it is in political will and targeted investment to make them operational on the ground.
Every warehouse built at a border crossing is a peace dividend. Every customs process digitized reduces a friction point that, left unaddressed, becomes a flashpoint. Every women’s trader association strengthened is a constituency for stability that no armed group can easily displace.
For global supply chain professionals, this signals urgent implications: trade facilitation must be treated as core infrastructure — not an afterthought. Multilateral financing packages must allocate dedicated budgets for soft infrastructure. Project evaluation frameworks must embed trade facilitation benchmarks alongside road-length targets. And border community investment must shift from CSR footnote to central component of the infrastructure thesis.
Source: www.thehabarinetwork.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










