Harnessing Digital Potential To Unlock Inclusive Growth And Job Creation

World Bank

Western and Central African countries are committed to accelerating digital transformation to ensure broadband access, develop artificial intelligence capabilities, create digital jobs, and build an integrated market by 2030.

COTONOU, November 18, 2025 - At the conclusion of a regional summit held on November 17-18, 2025, in Benin, ministers responsible for digital affairs from West and Central African countries adopted the Cotonou Declaration, signaling their strong commitment to accelerating digital transformation in the region. They set ambitious targets for 2030, including achieving affordable and reliable broadband access for 90% of the population, deploying interoperable public digital infrastructure such as digital identity and payment systems, doubling intra-African e-commerce, and adopting harmonized frameworks for cybersecurity, data governance, and Artificial Intelligence (AI) to create a trusted environment.

The Cotonou Declaration also calls for large-scale training to ensure that 20 million people acquire basic digital skills, and that 2 million young people and women benefit from digital jobs or entrepreneurship opportunities. In addition, ministers pledged to boost digital innovation ecosystems in partnership with the private sector. They also agreed to promote African AI solutions by developing regional computing, cloud, and data infrastructure and implementing AI application programs in priority sectors for inclusive economic transformation.

To achieve these goals, the Declaration calls for mobilizing public and private investments through national digital compacts, which will align reform objectives, financing needs, and strategic partnerships with the private sector around the targets set in the Declaration to accelerate inclusive growth and job creation. Concrete measures were discussed to foster the exchange of best practices and coordination aimed at creating regional digital markets and encouraging private sector investment in digital infrastructure, leveraging regional initiatives such as Mission 300 (M300)-a pan-African initiative to connect 300 million Africans to electricity by 2030 to support the continent's digital and economic transformation.

Digital technology has emerged as one of the most powerful drivers of economic and social transformation. A true engine of growth, it boosts productivity, fosters job creation, and strengthens inclusion. The commitments made in Cotonou reflect a shared determination to turn the promise of digital into tangible progress and position West and Central Africa as a major player in the global digital economy.

Co-organized by the Government of the Republic of Benin and the World Bank Group, the regional summit on digital transformation in West and Central Africa brought together more than 200 participants, including high-level officials such as ministers, representatives of regional economic communities, private sector leaders, young digital innovators, civil society organizations, and international experts. It aligns with the African Union's 2030 objectives to ensure universal and affordable broadband access, build a single African digital market, and fully seize opportunities offered by emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence to achieve the continent's digital transformation.

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