Lagos holds multitudes. So does the question of what kind of capital African economies actually need.
Image: Vitalis Nwenyi / Unsplash
The Africa Finance Corporation's (AFC) commitment of up to $100 million to back Africa-focused technology funds made its rounds recently.
Iyinoluwa Aboyeji, whose Future Africa Fund III is a co-headline beneficiary of the announcement (receiving $15 million of the initial deployment), put out an impassioned response that was part testimony, part provocation, framing the development as a key sovereignty moment.
African institutional capital, on its own terms, backing African fund managers without the geopolitical strings that typically accompany foreign limited partner (LP) relationships.
My perennial thinking partner Tayo Akinyemi called it "remember this date" energy in the comments.
I noted it as a significant signal that African tech VC is inching towards legitimacy as an asset class, both by traditional global standards and by a unique African definition.
I stand by that. And I want to think a bit more carefully about what it does and doesn't tell us.
Because the co-headline beneficiary in the same announcement is Lightrock Africa Fund II, which received $25 million, the larger of the two initial commitments.
Lightrock is a London-headquartered impact investor whose origins trace directly to the Princely House of Liechtenstein, one of the world's oldest and most institutionally embedded European private banking dynasties.
That is about as far from "we no longer need to get on a plane to look for capital" as it's possible to get while still being in the same press release.
The sovereignty narrative and institutional reality are, at the very least, in tension with one another. That doesn't invalidate either investment. It does complicate tying things up in a tidy bow.
Around the same time, a new philanthropic venture-building outfit called the Africa Jobs Fund published its founding manifesto.
Their headline ambition ($100 million mobilised towards export manufacturing and international labour mobility, targeting USD 50 billion in income gains for low-income Africans) arrives with a self-published cost-effectiveness model and a striking claim: that every $1 of philanthropic subsidy could generate at least $500 in income gains.
The fund is still raising its initial USD 15 million. Its first companies are yet to be built. How durable their model proves under the full weight of execution remains to be seen.
Meanwhile, Aboyeji himself is notably listed as an advisor to the Africa Jobs Fund; a fund whose manifesto argues, at some length, that venture-scale returns accrue to a narrow subset of business models that are often not the ones creating the deepest economic impact.
Whether that makes him an unusually intellectually honest operator, willing to simultaneously back competing theories of change, or whether it quietly softens the manifesto's "why not VC" section into something closer to a segmentation argument than a structural critique, well… I'd hazard it's more the latter. Which is, I reckon, the more defensible position.
A few months ago, I distilled a more subdued version of a related argument made by Joshua Bicknell of Balloon Ventures: that a modest SME loan book in East Africa was driving outsized real economic impact precisely because it was backing businesses the tech ecosystem considers too boring to bother with.
Since then, Balloon closed a debt round with Ceniarth, A to Z Impact, and the Dunn Family Charitable Foundation — patient, impact-first capital — to grow their portfolio to USD 15 million across Uganda, Tanzania, and Kenya.
The close came with Bicknell's public frustration, articulated after a couple of days at AFSIC Conference 2025 in London talking with funds and development finance institutions (DFIs), that for a profitable, growing real-economy business seeking $2 million–$5 million in equity, the institutional funding landscape in Africa offers what he mapped, bluntly, as "basically nothing."
Too small for growth equity. Wrong unit economics for VC. Left to a handful of family offices and foundations.
Three interventions. Three capital instruments. Three theories of what African markets actually need.
Oversimplification is the enemy. And our ecosystem has a pronounced tendency to jump too quickly from observation to value judgement — or worse, to sweeping definitive takes. I stray into that territory myself sometimes.
Fact is, there are parallel realities here that need to be simultaneously addressed by interventions that on the surface may appear (or actually are) in tension with each other. Tech VC legitimacy as an asset class is a real problem.
SME credit access is a real problem. Export manufacturing's chronic underfunding is a real problem. African institutional capital's dependency on foreign LPs is a real problem.
These aren't competing claims. They're different instruments, needed at the same time, for different purposes. I sense that the tension between them is often more rhetorical than structural, with each camp presenting itself as the solution rather than a solution.
Furthermore, some things are real without necessarily being true under the rigour of first principles thinking.
The Africa Jobs Fund's cost-effectiveness model may well be sound. But a fund benchmarking its prospective impact against GiveWell's decades of randomised control trial evidence, while yet to build its first company, is making a gutsy rhetorical move.
The effective altruism (EA) intellectual framework demands rigour. That rigour should apply to claims made on its behalf too, however well-intentioned and carefully modelled they appear at launch.
A broader observation illustrated, not exhausted, by the AFC moment and what surrounds it is that institutions, funds, frameworks and models are tools.
They don't deploy themselves. And in markets as relationship-dense, institutionally thin, and contextually complex as most African ecosystems, there are problems that only the right people can solve — however brilliantly conceived, well-intentioned, and diligently deployed any given institutional intervention might be.
Ultimately, the AFC deal is an important signal on two counts. Future Africa Fund III, and by extension Aboyeji himself, is proving to be a bankable investment vehicle. And African institutional capital is, at this particular moment, demonstrably recalibrating what it believes it can back on its own terms. In this instance, I think it’s fair to assert that the signal required a specific person to play lightning rod. No framework produces that.
The replicable and the irreplaceable are both necessary components to ecosystem success. Anyone telling you otherwise is probably oversimplifying.
Andile Masuku is co-founder and executive producer at African Tech Roundup. He serves as executive editor of Future in the Humanities (FITH), powered by the SA–UK Chair in the Digital Humanities at Wits University. Connect and engage with Andile on X (@MasukuAndile) and via LinkedIn.
Andile Masuku is co-founder and executive producer at African Tech Roundup. He serves as executive editor of Future in the Humanities (FITH), powered by the SA–UK Chair in the Digital Humanities at Wits University. Connect and engage with Andile on X (@MasukuAndile) and via LinkedIn.
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