Morocco dethrones South Africa to become the most industrialized country in Africa

By Morkporkpor Anku  

Accra, May 30, GNA – Morocco has now established itself as the leading industrial economy on the African continent.  

This is one of the main takeaways from the 2025 edition of the African Industrialisation Index published by the African Development Bank (AfDB) on the sidelines of its 2026 Annual Meetings in Brazzaville.  

A statement issued in Accra said for the first time, the Kingdom had overtaken South Africa, long regarded as the continent’s industrial benchmark.  

The AfDB attributed this progress to the upgrading of Morocco’s productive apparatus, the diversification of its exports, and the continuity of its industrial policy. 

The statement said this ranking marked a significant shift in Africa’s industrial geography.  

“South Africa remains a major manufacturing power, but its lead is eroding, while Morocco is capitalising on two decades of industrial strategy, integration into global value chains, and investment in infrastructure,” itadded.  

It said the automotive, aerospace, electrical, chemical, and agro-industrial sectors have gradually shaped an export-oriented model, supported by industrial platforms, free zones, efficient ports, and partnerships with major international groups. 

The AfDB index covers all 54 African countries over the period 2010–2024. 

It was not limited to industrial volume: it also takes into account productive sophistication, diversification, competitiveness, and the ability of economies to integrate into value chains. 

According to the report, 41 African countries improved their industrialisation scores, while the continent’s overall performance rose by 6 per cent.  

It said this improvement, however, remained uneven, with North Africa and Southern Africa continuing to dominate. 

The statement said the Moroccan case illustrated this rise in strength and in the automotive sector, the Kingdom had become a major production and export platform for Europe. 

It said the aerospace sector also confirmed this trajectory and in October 2025, Safran announced a €200 million investment to establish in Morocco an engine assembly line for Airbus, as well as a maintenance unit near Casablanca.  

“Morocco already hosts around 150 aerospace companies, employing 25,000 people, and the sector’s exports reached 26 billion dirhams in 2024,” it added. 

It said Morocco ranks first on a continent where industrialisation still remains limited on a global scale.  

“Africa accounts for less than 2 per  cent of global manufacturing production and only 1.4 per cent of manufactured exports, according to the report,” it said. 

It said the Industrial Investment Barometer in Africa, launched alongside the AfDB index, highlights that North Africa leads in industrial diversification, investment attractiveness, and productive anchoring. 

It said region was said to have attracted 56 per cent of cumulative industrial investment on the continent between 2020 and 2025, with Morocco and Egypt at the forefront. 

The statement said Morocco’s recognition in the 2025 African Industrialisation Index confirms the effectiveness of a strategic choice: making industry a lever of economic sovereignty, exports, and attractiveness. 

It also serves as a reminder that industrial leadership is not measured solely by a ranking. 

The statement noted that it would be measured by Morocco’s ability to create more local value, train the necessary skills, green its industry, and contribute to a less fragmented African industrialisation. 

“From this perspective, Morocco is becoming a laboratory for the continent: a country that has succeeded in attracting capital, structuring export-oriented sectors, and building a competitive industrial base,” it added. 

GNA 

Kenneth Odeng Adade 

Reporter: Morkporkpor Anku 
[email protected]