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Rethinking global labels from an African lens

Global institutions have long shaped inequality through language, dividing nations into 'rich/poor' and later 'developed/developing'. After World War II, the United Nations, World Bank, and International Monetary Fund formalised these categories, reinforced by US President Truman’s 1949 'underdeveloped areas' speech. By the 1960s, these labels defined trade, aid, and policy, rebranding but never escaping the same hierarchy.

Today, these terms are increasingly outdated, misleading, and counterproductive. They assume a single, linear path toward the lifestyle and structures of industrialisation, erasing diverse models of progress. For Africa, with its rich histories, resource endowments, and socio-economic realities, such framing oversimplifies and undervalues local contexts.

Rethinking global labels from an African lens

In Sesotho, there is a saying: lebitso lebe ke seromo – 'a bad name is a curse and will manifest'. When Africa is labelled 'developing or least developed', the deficit narrative takes hold, portraying nations as perpetual laggards rather than dynamic actors. Accepting such terms risks internalising and perpetuating the very limitations they imply. Discarding outdated labels is therefore more than symbolic, it is about reclaiming narrative power.

The World Bank itself has recognised the problem, it classifies economies by GNP per capita i.e. low, middle, and high income and discarding 'developed' and 'developing' in its World Development Indicators. This shift acknowledges two realities. Firstly, grouping a diverse set of countries under 'developing' masks profound differences and secondly, many indicators show overlap between so-called 'developed' and 'developing' countries. This is not mere semantics: the labels influence how policy, finance, and cooperation are structured.

Africa leading the future

The evidence speaks for itself. Many African nations are already global leaders in key sectors:

  • Financial innovation: Kenya’s M-Pesa mobile money system is a global benchmark, outpacing digital finance adoption in high income economies.

  • Green energy leadership: Namibia, Morocco, and South Africa are pioneers in green hydrogen, solar, and wind.

  • Growth rates: Ethiopia, Rwanda, Côte d’Ivoire, and Senegal rank among the world’s fastest-growing economies.

  • Demographic dividend: With a median age under 20, Africa holds a labour and innovation advantage over ageing societies.

  • Digital leapfrogging: Nigeria, Kenya, and South Africa lead in fintech, start-ups, and e-commerce growth.

Despite these advances, the continent is still grouped under vague banners like 'developing' or 'least developed', erasing its leadership in shaping the future.

Africa’s critical minerals, abundant solar, wind, and hydropower potential are not just extractive assets. Used strategically, they can uplift local economies, drive green industrialisation, and build continental value chains. Harnessed this way, resources become levers of agency, rewriting dependency narratives and positioning Africa’s natural wealth and youthful workforce as a global advantage.

Beyond binaries: New groupings

Outdated binaries ignore shifting realities. New coalitions such as Brics and the G20 demonstrate that influence and cooperation can no longer be captured by 'developed vs developing'. South Africa’s presence in both shows that African economies are active shapers of global agendas, reforming financial systems and leading debates on climate justice and energy transitions.

Instead of deficit-driven categories, classifications could affirm agency and contribution, such as knowledge-rich economies, resource-rich economies, demographic-advantage economies, and technology-connector economies. In this context, terms such as 'emerging', 'transforming', or 'innovation-driven' better reflect dynamism and resilience.

Redefining the conversation

Language shapes power. If Africa is to achieve its Agenda 2063 vision, 'the Africa we want', the global community must move beyond labels that perpetuate dependency. Ubuntu teaches us that societies thrive in interdependence, not hierarchy. Countries should be recognised for their unique roles in sustaining the global community, not ranked as better or worse.

For Africa, this is not about fitting into existing categories. It is about reshaping them. The time has come to redefine the conversation. For Africa, this is not about fitting into global categories it is about reshaping them to reflect the continent’s realities, ambitions, resources, and rightful place in the world.

The ESG Africa Conference will be taking place from 15 to 16 October at the Sandton Convention Centre. This is Africa’s premier event for sustainability, and aims to address how sustainability and ESG are applicable in an African context. For more information, visit the website at www.esgafricaconference.com.

About Wendy Poulton and Molupe Mat’sumunyane

Wendy Poulton is director and co-founder of the Sustainability and ESG Africa Conference, and Molupe Mat'sumunyane is a partner at African Botho Advisory.
ESG Africa Conference
The ESG Africa conference aims to create a platform for industry leaders and experts across Africa to discuss, debate and find solutions to some of the common challenges faced in embedding ESG practices within organisations. The main theme of the conference is a 'Sustainable Future Through Leadership'; highlighting the significant role leaders can and should play in ensuring their organisations better integrate ESG principles into their value system and overall organisational strategy.
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