At a time when global trade patterns are becoming more fragmented and traditional export markets more uncertain, Africa is emerging as an increasingly relevant growth region in global economic relations, including for Switzerland.
While Switzerland continues to demonstrate economic stability, many African economies are projected to grow at significantly higher rates over the coming years. At the same time, trade between Switzerland and African countries has expanded steadily over the past decade, with Swiss companies active across multiple sectors on the continent.
This reflects a sustained and multi-layered engagement between Switzerland and African markets, spanning trade, private sector activity, and development cooperation.
However, these different forms of engagement are not always structured in a fully integrated way.
Switzerland’s engagement in Africa typically operates through several parallel channels, including development cooperation (notably through SDC and SECO), commercial trade relationships, and private sector initiatives. Each of these follows its own institutional logic, objectives, and time horizons.
In practice, this can result in engagement that is effective at the project level, but less connected across sectors or over longer timeframes.
Based on more than four decades of experience working across multiple industries in Switzerland, Africa and beyond. I consistently observed that outcomes are often strongest where engagement is not only project-based, but also embedded in longer-term relationships across institutions and sectors.
African markets themselves are highly diverse. They consist of a wide range of economies with different regulatory environments, institutional capacities, and development trajectories. Differences between countries such as Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, and Côte d’Ivoire are significant and require context-specific approaches.
Where more uniform approaches are applied across these contexts, additional complexity often emerges during implementation.
Another important dimension is the role of local expertise. Across African markets, there is substantial technical knowledge, entrepreneurial activity, and institutional capability. In many cases, however, external partners are more involved in programme design, while local stakeholders are more strongly represented at the implementation stage and have to take what they get for fragile economies reasons, not local needs that lead to failure of projects.
More integrated approaches, where relevant stakeholders contribute across both design and implementation phases, can support greater alignment over time.
This is becoming increasingly relevant as African economies expand in sectors such as renewable energy, financial services, infrastructure, and digital innovation. These sectors are increasingly interconnected with global value chains and are evolving at different speeds across the continent.
For Switzerland, this represents an established but evolving area of engagement.
Switzerland already maintains strong relationships across African markets through trade, private sector activity, and development cooperation. These include long-standing institutional frameworks as well as company-level partnerships.
At the same time, there is often limited alignment between these different forms of engagement. Greater coordination across trade, development, and private sector activity may support more consistent and long-term partnership outcomes.
In many international contexts, sustained engagement depends not only on individual projects, but also on continuity and trust built over time. Trust in this sense is not a single outcome, but a process that develops through consistency and shared understanding.
Another relevant factor is the ability to operate across different cultural and institutional environments. This includes understanding differences in communication styles, decision-making processes, and organisational expectations.
This capability is increasingly important in international engagement, particularly where multiple institutional systems interact.
It also relates to how principles such as inclusion are interpreted across contexts. While Swiss organisations have made progress in integrating diversity and inclusion frameworks, their application in international settings often requires adaptation. The underlying principles, fairness, respect, and access to opportunity remain consistent, even where implementation differs.
There are already clear areas of alignment between Switzerland and African markets, particularly in healthcare, education, financial services, and technology-driven innovation. These sectors are expected to continue evolving as African economies deepen regional integration and expand intra-African trade.
Over time, these developments will further increase the complexity and significance of Africa’s role in global economic systems.
Switzerland’s traditional strengths, precision, reliability, and quality remain highly relevant in this context. At the same time, engagement in more complex and fast-evolving environments places increasing importance on adaptability and contextual awareness, especially in digitizing and AI
The ability to listen, to understand local dynamics, and to engage in long-term, reciprocal partnerships may become increasingly important alongside transactional and project-based approaches.
The central question is therefore not whether Africa is relevant to Switzerland’s economic future. Current engagement already reflects that it is.
The more relevant question is how existing relationships evolve in response to changing economic realities, and how partnership models adapt to reflect both continuity and increasing complexity in these markets.










