India-Africa Forum Summit: Officials Push for Deeper Engagement with African Financial Institutions
India urges enhanced insurance coverage for projects as Africa faces $155bn annual infrastructure financing gap
Quick Look
- Ahead of the India Africa Forum Summit, officials called for deeper engagement with African financial institutions including the African Development Bank and Afrexim Bank.
- India has opened 17 new missions across Africa in the past 7-8 years and is Africa's fourth-largest trading partner with $85 billion in bilateral trade in 2025.
- However, Africa faces a $155 billion annual infrastructure investment gap and a $80-120 billion trade finance deficit.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
India has been expanding its engagement with Africa through Lines of Credit, community development projects, and professional training programs. The India Africa Forum Summit is a key platform for strengthening these ties. India is currently Africa's fourth-largest trading partner and among its top five investors.
Ahead of the India Africa Forum Summit, officials urged deeper engagement with African financial institutions and enhanced insurance for projects. India's commitment to Africa's development is evident in its expanding diplomatic presence and significant overseas development assistance. Despite strong trade growth, Africa faces substantial financing challenges for infrastructure and a persistent trade finance deficit.
Ahead of India Africa Forum Summit, Sudhakar Dalela, Secretary (Economic Relations), Ministry of External Affairs, urged stakeholders to explore more active engagement with institutions such as the African Development Bank, Afrexim Bank, and the ECOWAS Bank for Investment and Development. He also called for greater attention to insurance coverage and financial security mechanisms for projects in Africa. He was addressing the FICCI-India Exim Bank Conference on Strengthening India-Africa Trade through Innovative Finance.
Dalela highlighted that strengthening development and economic cooperation aligned with the African priorities has remained a central tenet of India's engagement with Africa. "From Lines of Credit for infrastructure and development projects, high-impact community development projects, to training thousands of African professionals and youth, the emphasis has consistently been on building human and physical capacity, empowerment local communities and skilling," Dalela said.
Alluding to India's growing engagement with Africa across all key pillars, in consonance with the government's priority for strengthening partnerships with countries in the Global South, the Secretary (ER) pointed to India's rapidly expanding presence on the continent as evidence of strategic commitment: 17 new missions have been opened across Africa in the past seven to eight years, covering all sub-regions.
India is currently Africa's fourth-largest trading partner and among its top five investors. The African continent is the second-largest recipient of India's overseas development assistance.
The financing challenge was further highlighted by Deepali Agrawal, Deputy Managing Director of India Exim Bank, who noted that "Africa requires annual infrastructure investments worth US$155 billion until 2040 for sustained economic growth and improved living standards," however, "funding constraints are impeding the region's infrastructure development as the current spending levels are insufficient to meet the region's total infrastructure investment demand."
Agrawal outlined the scale of Exim Bank's existing financing architecture in Africa: 308 projects supported under Lines of Credit valued at $8.9 billion across 39 countries, facilitating access to essential infrastructure, improving livelihoods, boosting agricultural productivity, enhancing industrial output and promoting sustainable development. These projects have also generated $7.1 billion in business opportunities for more than 160 Indian companies.
She also highlighted Africa's persistent trade finance deficit — estimated at $80 billion to $120 billion annually — with only 40 per cent of financing requests from African businesses approved, compared with a global average of 60 to 70 per cent. Exim Bank's Trade Assistance Programme, launched in 2022, has supported 150 transactions across 25 countries and generated $1.4 billion in incremental bilateral trade.
Mercantile trade between India and Africa reached $85 billion in 2025, she said, recording year-on-year growth of 10.7 per cent — more than double the 4.6 per cent growth in India's overall trade during the same period. Indian outward investment in Africa stood at $91 billion for the period 1996 to March 2025, Agrawal informed.
Jyoti Vij, Director General of FICCI, called for a shift in both scale and urgency. "As Indian industry continues to expand its footprint across Africa, the need for robust and innovative financing solutions becomes most critical," she said, arguing that stronger collaboration between financial institutions, government, and industry was now essential to build what she termed "a resilient and enabling ecosystem."
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
India will announce new Lines of Credit at the India Africa Forum Summit
Likely · Within weeks
Exim Bank will increase financing for African infrastructure projects
Very likely · Within months
India-Africa trade will surpass $90 billion by 2027
Likely · Within months
Open Questions
- What specific outcomes are expected from the upcoming India Africa Forum Summit?
- How will the $155 billion infrastructure financing gap be addressed?
- What new financing mechanisms will be introduced?