South Africa has today officially acceded to the Establishment Agreement of pan-African multilateral financial institution, the African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank).

South Africa becomes the 54th state to accede to the bank’s Establishment Agreement, aimed at unlocking trade opportunities within a global financial architecture that is rapidly fragmenting due to protectionist policies and shifting trade blocs.

To operationalise this partnership, Afreximbank will launch major financial interventions in South Africa, including a new $8-billion country programme designed to deepen the economy.

These programmes are tailored to expand the bank’s developmental impact; enhance industrial development and regional supply chains and significantly boost intra-African trade and investment flows.

This support is strategically aligned with South Africa’s economic ambitions.

As the continent’s highest regional contributor to intra African trade, accounting for 19,1% of the continent’s total trade in 2024, South Africa is uniquely positioned to leverage Afreximbank’s trade infrastructure, expertise and pan African reach to extend its export relationships across the continent.

Dr George Elombi, president and chairman of the Afreximbank board, notes: “This affirmation of the membership of South Africa in Afreximbank marks a decisive step towards uniting around the continent’s economic interests, the interests of our mother continent.

South Africa’s membership of the bank, while providing Afreximbank a full continental coverage, brings the country into the heart of Afreximbank’s vision and its aspirations to promote the change so much desired in the structure of Africa’s trade.

“I am therefore pleased that together with the South African Department of Trade, Industry and Competition (DTIC), under the leadership of Parks Tau, we have put together what we consider an important package of $8-billion for South Africa. The country programme is aligned with South Africa’s national development plan 2030 and national industrial and trade priorities, and targets key strategic areas.

Dr Elombi adds that Afreximbank’s current pipeline of projects in South Africa, at different stages of review, exceeds $6-billion, spanning healthcare, financial services, manufacturing, energy, industrial and mining sectors.

South African president Cyril Ramaphosa comments: “Today we mark a major milestone in our quest to realise what I would call the economic integration of our continent.

“South Africa’s accession to the African Export-Import Bank affirms our commitment to African industrial development and to deepening trade, investment and development across our continent.

“Once finalised, the South African-Afreximbank country programme will be operationalised with a finance package that will initially support a range of strategic projects across the trade and industrial cluster.

“One of those areas that we are going to focus on with immediate effect is to give muscle to our Transformation Fund, to support black businesses who, by the way, were held back by the apartheid system from being active participants in the economy of our country.”

Ramaphosa adds: “For more than 30 years, Afreximbank has demonstrated its own ability, its resilience, its innovative capability but it has more than that demonstrated that it has impact. This partnership will strengthen in more ways than one South Africa’s ability to support South African exporters, industrial projects and regional value chains while advancing our continent’s progress.”

Both South Africa and Afreximbank have resolved to jointly pursue trade and economic development programmes, key among them the South Africa-Africa Trade and Investment Promotion Programme (SATIPP), the Afreximbank Guarantee Programme, the financing of Industrial Parks and Special Economic Zones, Project and Asset Based Finance, conventional trade finance, Afreximbank Project Preparation, and financing devised to support the creative and cultural industries, as well as a broad range of advisory services.