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NewsDay

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Phones without food: The paradox of Africa’s connectivity revolution

Opinion & Analysis
By 2025, more than 615 million Africans will subscribe to mobile services, with smartphone penetration crossing the 50% mark, according to GSMA data. 

AFRICA’S development story is often told through two parallel narratives.  

On the one hand, the continent is home to some of the fastest-growing mobile adoption rates in the world.  

By 2025, more than 615 million Africans will subscribe to mobile services, with smartphone penetration crossing the 50% mark, according to GSMA data. 

Mobile money has become a global reference point, with Kenya’s M-Pesa alone processing billions of dollars in annual transactions.  

Connectivity, digital finance and AI-driven innovation are reshaping how Africans work, trade and interact. 

On the other hand, hunger and deprivation remain stark realities.  

The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation estimates that over 280 million Africans are undernourished — nearly one in five people on the continent.  

Millions live without access to clean water or reliable electricity.  

The image of someone owning a cellphone while struggling to feed their family reflects more than irony; it reveals a deeper structural paradox at the core of Africa’s growth model. 

But why is Africa so connected, yet still hungry? 

Unlike traditional development paths, Africa’s digital revolution has benefited from “leapfrogging”. 

Mobile towers are far cheaper and faster to deploy than national power grids, irrigation systems or highway networks.  

This explains why mobile penetration surged in places where electricity access or road density  

remain among the lowest in the world. 

Private capital has poured into telecommunications and fintech because of clear demand and profit potential.  

In contrast, food systems, energy security and water access often depend on fragmented supply chains, heavy public spending and long-term reforms. 

Investors see quicker returns in mobile money apps than in building rural irrigation systems. 

Governments have promoted digital innovation as a symbol of modernisation, while food security and agriculture — though central to livelihoods — have been harder to reform. 

The result is a digital economy running ahead of basic human development, with the two not always converging. 

Despite this imbalance, connectivity offers a way forward — if it is harnessed deliberately to solve structural problems. 

Agritech: Start-ups in Nigeria, Kenya and Ghana are already using mobile platforms to give farmers access to real-time weather data, market prices and mobile-based microcredit.  

This reduces vulnerability to shocks and increases productivity. 

Healthtech: Telemedicine and mobile diagnostics in countries like Rwanda and South Africa are helping rural communities to access healthcare professionals without the need for long journeys. 

Energy access: Pay-as-you-go solar systems linked to mobile payments are expanding electrification in off-grid areas, reducing reliance on kerosene and wood fuel. 

Education: E-learning platforms delivered via smartphones are bridging gaps in education quality, particularly in rural or conflict-affected regions. 

In each of these cases, the mobile phone becomes more than a communication tool — it transforms into a tool of survival, empowerment and resilience. 

To close the gap between digital progress and human development, Africa needs more than apps and connectivity. 

Three policy priorities stand out: 

Integrating digital technology into food systems: Governments must incentivise agritech solutions with supportive regulation, financing and partnerships that connect farmers to digital ecosystems. 

Scaling blended finance: Development banks, private equity and sovereign funds should pool resources into projects that link digital infrastructure with essential services like agriculture, health and water. 

Promoting inclusive access: Mobile connectivity must be affordable, reliable and accessible to women, rural communities and SMEs.  

Digital divides risk entrenching existing inequalities. 

The paradox of Africa’s connectivity is both a challenge and an opportunity.  

The sight of a farmer with a mobile phone, but no reliable food supply is not just an anecdote; it is a reminder that digital growth alone does not guarantee inclusive development.  

Yet it also signals a way forward: if connectivity is deliberately integrated into solving the continent’s food, energy and health challenges, Africa can transform its paradox into progress. 

As the continent moves towards a projected population of 2,5 billion people by 2050, the stakes are clear.  

Connectivity cannot be celebrated in isolation.  

 

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