President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s recent proposal at the Africa CEO Forum in Kigali to establish a Pan-African Commodity Exchange has sparked important conversations across policy, economic, trade, financial, and development circles.
Like many bold continental ideas, the proposal carries both strategic promise and practical concerns.
The idea itself is emotionally appealing and intellectually attractive.
Africa possesses enormous natural wealth.
The continent is richly endowed with agricultural commodities, solid minerals, energy reoxically, Africa continues to occupy the lower end of global value chains — exporting raw materials cheaply while importing finished products at high cost
This contradiction has persisted for decades.
In that context, President Tinubu’s proposal reflects a legitimate frustration with Africa’s fragmented trade architecture and the continent’s historical inability to leverage its collective re
The proposal deserves thoughtful engagement – not emotional dismissal or uncritical applause.
The real question is not whether the vision is noble.
The real question is whether the institutional foundations exist to make such an ambitious continental platform effective, sustainable, inclusive, and globally competitive.
Both the merits and demerits must therefore be examined carefully.
The strategic merits of a Pan-African commodity exchange
One of the strongest arguments in favour of a pan-African commodity exchange is the potential to deepen intra-African trade.
Africa currently trades more with Europe, Asia, and North America than with itself. Intra-African trade remains relatively low compared with other regions of the world despite the continent’s vast re
A continental commodity exchange could potentially:
• Improve market integration,
• Enhance regional trade coordination
• Increase transparency in commodity pricing,
• Reduce excessive dependence on external commodity markets
• Strengthen African bargaining power globally
• And support the objectives of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).
If properly designed, it could also help African producers achieve better price discovery.
Today, many African farmers and commodity producers operate with limited access to transparent market information. Prices are often determined by intermediaries, fragmented local markets, or external commodity benchmarks over which African producers have little influence.
A functional continental exchange could potentially:
• Standardise commodity grading,
• Reduce exploitative middleman structures,
• And create more efficient commodity trading systems.
Another potential advantage is currency diversification.
Africa’s excessive dependence on the US dollar for intra-African trade creates significant transaction costs and exposes African economies to exchange-rate volatility.
A continental trading platform could stimulate:
• Local currency settlement systems,
• Bilateral swap arrangements,
• And eventually, stronger African financial integration.
This aligns with broader continental aspirations around economic sovereignty and reduced vulnerability to external financial shocks.
The proposal also has symbolic and psychological importance.
Africa has historically operated as fragmented national economies rather than as an integrated continental economic bloc. Large continental projects — despite their difficulties — often help stimulate long-term strategic thinking and institutional ambition.
Vision matters in development.
Sometimes, transformational projects begin first as imperfect political ideas before evolving into mature institutional systems over time.
The European Union itself evolved gradually through decades of economic coordination, institutional experimentation, and political negotiation.
Similarly, a Pan-African Commodity Exchange could become part of a broader long-term continental integration architecture if approached strategically and incrementally.
Furthermore, if accompanied by industrialisation policies, commodity exchanges can help support local value addition.
Africa’s long-standing challenge is not merely commodity production but commodity dependence without industrial upgrading.
A properly integrated exchange system linked to manufacturing, logistics, warehousing, financing, and processing industries could potentially stimulate the following:
• Agro-industrial development,
• And export competitiveness.
In theory, the proposal is therefore not without merit.
But theory and implementation are not the same thing.
The practical demerits and structural risks
The strongest criticism of the proposal lies not in its vision but in its timing and institutional feasibility.
Commodity exchanges do not function primarily because of political declarations.
They function because of a trust infrastructure.
Successful exchanges require the following:
• Reliable contract enforcement,
• Efficient payment systems,
• Warehouse receipt systems,
• Trusted commodity grading mechanisms,
• Credible arbitration frameworks,
• High-quality logistics infrastructure,
• And institutional discipline.
Many African economies still struggle significantly in these areas.
This is where critics of the proposal raise valid concerns.
Africa currently operates under the following:
• Multiple currency systems,
• Varying exchange-rate regimes,
• Foreign exchange restrictions,
• Different regulatory systems,
• Uneven legal enforcement mechanisms,
• And varying political priorities.
These structural realities create major operational risks for any continent-wide exchange.
Commodity markets function efficiently when price signals move freely.
But when currencies are volatile, capital movements are restricted, and policy is unpredictable, price distortions emerge quickly.
Without deep institutional reform, a pan-African exchange risks becoming the following:
• Or dominated by large, politically connected players.
There is also the risk of unequal participation.
Larger economies such as Nigeria, South Africa, Egypt, Kenya, and Morocco may naturally exert disproportionate influence over pricing structures, regulatory frameworks, and trading dynamics.
Smaller economies may fear marginalisation.
Likewise, sophisticated international commodity traders may ultimately benefit more from market inefficiencies than African smallholder producers themselves.
Another major challenge is infrastructure readiness.
Efficient commodity exchanges require:
• Commodity testing laboratories,
• Commodity certification systems,
• And dispute resolution mechanisms.
Many African countries still face serious logistics bottlenecks that significantly raise transaction costs.
A farmer may successfully trade electronically on a continental platform but still lack the physical infrastructure needed to move goods efficiently to buyers.
In such situations, the exchange becomes disconnected from the real economy.
There is also historical caution.
Africa has launched several ambitious continental initiatives whose implementation has fallen short of expectations because institutional capacity did not match political aspirations.
The challenge has rarely been the absence of ideas.
The challenge has often been in implementing discipline, maintaining governance consistency, and ensuring long-term institutional continuity.
This is why some analysts argue that Africa should focus first on the following:
• Regional commodity exchanges,
• Warehouse receipt legislation,
• Commodity standardisation,
• And legal harmonisation before attempting a full continental exchange.
That argument is not anti-African integration.
It is an argument for sequencing.
The debate should not become polarised between unquestioning optimism and cynical pessimism.
Africa needs ambition.
But Africa also needs institutional realism.
The proposal should be viewed not as an immediate, fully operational continental exchange, but as a long-term, phased integration project.
Strengthening national commodity exchanges first,
Developing regional exchange interoperability,
Harmonising commodity standards gradually,
Expanding regional payment systems,
Building warehouse infrastructure,
Improving transport corridors,
Strengthening dispute resolution systems,
Encouraging local currency settlement arrangements,
Digitising commodity traceability systems,
And deepening AfCFTA operationalisation incrementally.
Over time, these building blocks could organically evolve into a more credible continental framework.
The ultimate lesson is simple:
Continental visions must be matched by continental institution-building.
A commodity exchange is not merely a trading platform.
It is an ecosystem of trust.
And trust cannot be announced into existence.
It must be built patiently through governance, discipline, infrastructure, transparency, legal certainty, and operational credibility.
President Tinubu’s proposal, therefore, deserves neither outright dismissal nor unquestioning celebration.
It deserves rigorous debate, strategic refinement, phased execution, and institutional realism.
Africa’s future will not be built merely by bold speeches alone.
Neither will it be built by excessive cynicism.
It will be built by visionary ambition combined with disciplined execution.
And perhaps that is the deeper opportunity hidden inside this important continental conversation.
Prof Lere Baale: CEO – Business School Netherlands International – Nigeria
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