Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms Of Service
    • Advertisement
    Monday, July 6
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    ABS Africa TV
    • Breaking News
    • Trending
    • Africa News
    • World News
    • Features
    • Technology
    • Sports
    • Politics
    • More
      • Culture
      • Lifestyle
      • Travel
      • Business
      • Environment
      • Legal
      • Health
      • Cameroon
      • Ambazonia
      • AfroSingles
      • Environ/Climate
      • Editorial
      • The Leak Magazine
    • Donate
    Subscription
    ABS Africa TV
    Home»Lifestyle»How Africa can turn its digital footprint into economic power
    Lifestyle

    How Africa can turn its digital footprint into economic power

    Jamia NdamukongBy Jamia NdamukongJuly 5, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    Post Views: 15

    How Africa can turn its digital footprint into economic power

    By Moses Kipkosgei
    | Jul. 5, 2026

    Governments must develop national data governance policies distinct from data protection laws, with clear frameworks for how anonymised and aggregate data can be shared. [iStockphoto]

    Every day, the world generates 2.5 quintillion bytes of data. Africa, home to 1.4 billion people and one of the fastest growing mobile populations on earth, contributes a significant and rising share of that torrent

    The data is here, the wealth it should be generating is not. The gap between those two facts is not a technology problem. It is a governance problem. When an international investor sits down to assess an African market, one of the first questions they ask is: what does the data say? What is the consumption trend in this sector? What is the demographic profile of this city?

    In most of our countries, the honest answer is that nobody knows, at least not officially. The data exists somewhere. It lives in the servers of global technology platforms, in the back offices of mobile operators, in the filing portals of government agencies that have never been asked to share what they hold

    There is no framework to surface it, policy to govern its use, and infrastructure to process it at scale. The result is a paradox that is quietly strangling African economic growth

    For the past decade, the continent’s policy conversation has been almost entirely consumed by the question of how to protect personal data from misuse. That conversation was necessary

    Kenya’s Data Protection Act, the General Data Protection Regulation in Europe, and the Africa Union’s own frameworks were important steps. But somewhere along the way, protection became the whole story, and that is where we went wrong

    Data protection laws regulate a narrow category of information: personally identifiable data traceable to a named individual. Their health record, financial transaction and biometric profile. This category is important and deserves the legal safeguards it has received. But it represents a fraction, perhaps less than one per cent, of the data that African economies generate daily

    The rest, aggregate, anonymised, sectoral, institutional, is not personal data within the meaning of the law. It cannot be traced back to any individual. There is no legal barrier to using it. And yet it sits idle, because an entire ecosystem of organisations – from hospitals to government registries and financial institutions – has decided that the safest response to data regulation is to share nothing at all

    The costs are measurable. The GSMA has found that a 10 per cent increase in mobile data utilisation in Africa could contribute up to two percentage points to a country’s GDP growth

    The World Bank has documented that improved access to administrative data can reduce the cost of doing business in developing economies by up to 25 per cent

    The African Development Bank has linked the absence of reliable sectoral data to billions of dollars in annual losses from inefficient re

    These are not abstract numbers. They represent hospitals that cannot plan bed capacity because patient flow data is locked away, roads built in the wrong places because no one queried movement patterns available in our own telecommunications infrastructure and investors who fly into Nairobi, spend three days trying to understand a market, and fly out without committing capital because the data they need simply cannot be found

    The African Union’s Data Policy Framework, adopted in 2022, recognised this and called on member states to build governance ecosystems that balance protection with access, sharing, and economic activation

    Most governments, Kenya included, have yet to translate that call into legislation. Baby steps have been commenced in Kenya with the proposed National Data Governance Policy. It will come in handy when it takes effect, and hopefully, implemented effectively

    At G&A Advocates, two decades of advising investors, governments, and businesses across sectors, from infrastructure and financial services to energy, health, and technology, have brought us repeatedly to the same inflection point

    The clients with the greatest appetite for Africa are invariably the ones most frustrated by the absence of reliable, accessible data. Data governance is no longer a compliance but an investment question

    Three things must change. Governments must develop national data governance policies distinct from data protection laws, with clear frameworks for how anonymised and aggregate data can be shared

    The private sector cannot wait for government to lead. Companies holding large datasets need legal counsel that helps them understand what they can lawfully share and what protections apply when they do. And Africa must invest urgently in the infrastructure to process data at scale

    Data is the new oil as the cliché goes. If that analogy holds, Africa is sitting on enormous reserves with no refineries, no pipelines and no coherent extraction policy. The question is whether we will keep watching others profit from our reserves, or finally build the architecture to govern, share and benefit from what is ours

    That conversation cannot wait. The cost of delay is not a future problem. It is the growth we are not seeing today

    – The writer is a partner at G&A Advocates LLP, which advises on infrastructure, capital markets and technology law across East Africa 

    Data ProtectionData GovernanceData PrivacyData Protection Act
    .

    Latest Stories

    PremiumComplicit: How ODM has traded Raila’s legacy for Ruto’s power
    PoliticsBy Harold Odhiambo
    1 hr ago
    PremiumRecycled cabinet: Court-ordered reshuffle revives scrutiny of Ruto’s broad-based ministers
    PoliticsBy Juliet Omelo
    1 hr ago
    PremiumOl Kalou decides: The making of Ruto-Gachagua fight for Mt Kenya supremacy
    PoliticsBy Josphat Thiong’o
    1 hr ago
    PremiumHow police protected goons attacking Linda Mwananchi convoy
    PoliticsBy Stanley Ongwae
    1 hr ago
    .

    Recommended Articles

    PremiumRecycled cabinet: Court-ordered reshuffle revives scrutiny of Ruto’s broad-based ministers
    PoliticsBy Juliet Omelo
    1 hr ago
    PremiumHow police protected goons attacking Linda Mwananchi convoy
    PoliticsBy Stanley Ongwae
    1 hr ago
    PremiumWhy citizen capture is more dangerous than state capture
    OpinionBy Rev Edward Buri
    1 hr ago
    PremiumOl Kalou decides: The making of Ruto-Gachagua fight for Mt Kenya supremacy
    PoliticsBy Josphat Thiong’o
    1 hr ago

    africa digital footprint into Turn
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Jamia Ndamukong
    • Website

    Related Posts

    South Africa Keeps Tourism Moving as Cape Town, Johannesburg, Durban and Kruger National Park Continue Operating Normally Amid Recent Protests: What Travellers Must Know Now before Visiting!

    July 6, 2026

    “The Republic of South Africa is not just a country that exports key minerals, but an optimal partne..

    July 6, 2026

    Tyla, Lamiez Holworthy, Kelvin Momo and more: SA takes over Afro Nation Portugal

    July 6, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Search
    Latest Post

    China, Namibia expanding bilateral ties

    July 6, 2026

    Gauteng Premier visits families of Ratanda protest victims

    July 6, 2026

    Nicko 2027/28 World Cruise includes extended South Africa and Indian Ocean calls

    July 6, 2026

    South Africa Keeps Tourism Moving as Cape Town, Johannesburg, Durban and Kruger National Park Continue Operating Normally Amid Recent Protests: What Travellers Must Know Now before Visiting!

    July 6, 2026

    ZAWYA: Sharjah Investment Forum returns in October with focus on building adaptive economies

    July 6, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    ABS TV and ABS Network News is a leading Pan-African 24/7 broadcasting network delivering nonstop news, talk shows, lifestyle programs, and digital media content worldwide through Satellite, Streaming Platforms, and Roku TV.
     
    Based in the United States, we connect Africa to the world while empowering creators, journalists, and brands through innovative media and broadcasting services.
    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp Instagram

    Our Picks

    China, Namibia expanding bilateral ties

    Gauteng Premier visits families of Ratanda protest victims

    Nicko 2027/28 World Cruise includes extended South Africa and Indian Ocean calls

    Most Popular

    South Africa Keeps Tourism Moving as Cape Town, Johannesburg, Durban and Kruger National Park Continue Operating Normally Amid Recent Protests: What Travellers Must Know Now before Visiting!

    ZAWYA: Sharjah Investment Forum returns in October with focus on building adaptive economies

    Oge Elumelu connects young Nigerians to jobs through new internship initiative

    © 2026 Copyright. All Rights Reserved by ABSAFRICATV
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Services

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.