Mozambique's Meteoric Rise in the Standard Bank Africa Trade Barometer
The latest edition of the Standard Bank Africa Trade Barometer (ATB), Issue 5 released in March 2026, has sent ripples through African business circles by crowning Mozambique as the top performer in intra-Africa trade rankings. This marks a significant shift, with the southeastern nation overtaking South Africa, which slipped to second place. Covering 10 key markets—Angola, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia—the report draws from surveys of over 2,200 firms and quantitative data, representing 68% of sub-Saharan Africa's GDP.
Mozambique's ascent from third place in August 2024 stems from robust macroeconomic indicators, including currency stability (the metical averaged 63.9 MZN per USD over three years) and strong export performance relative to GDP. Massive foreign direct investment (FDI) into liquefied natural gas (LNG) projects like Coral South and Coral Norte has been a game-changer, positioning Mozambique third in FDI inflows among the tracked nations. However, the survey-based component reveals challenges, with Mozambique ranking ninth out of ten in business experiences due to a $700 million foreign exchange backlog and limited local spillovers from FDI dominated by foreign contractors.
South Africa's Position: Strengths Amid the Slip
South Africa, long the leader, now holds second place, a drop attributed to persistent logistics bottlenecks despite recent gains. The country benefits from interest rate cuts enhancing access to finance (credit index up from 43 to 49) and infrastructure upgrades like new cranes at Durban Port and rail efficiencies under Operation Vulindlela. Namibia rounds out the top three, followed by Tanzania (4th), Nigeria (5th), Ghana (6th), Kenya (7th), Angola (8th), Uganda (9th), and Zambia (10th).
| Rank | Country | Previous Rank (Aug 2024) |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mozambique | 3 |
| 2 | South Africa | 1 |
| 3 | Namibia | 2 |
| 4 | Tanzania | - |
| 5 | Nigeria | - |
| 6 | Ghana | - |
| 7 | Kenya | - |
| 8 | Angola | - |
| 9 | Uganda | - |
| 10 | Zambia | - |
This table illustrates the dynamic shifts, highlighting Mozambique's quantitative leap propelled by LNG exports, while South Africa's qualitative survey strengths hold it near the top.
Infrastructure Improvements: A Continent-Wide First
For the first time since the barometer's 2022 launch, all infrastructure categories—power, telecoms, roads, rail, ports, and digital borders—improved simultaneously across the 10 markets. Power ratings rose to 2.5/5, aided by grid storage and renewables. East Africa's corridor upgrades and policy coordination slashed border delays, boosting exports by 10 percentage points. South Africa saw port and rail enhancements, yet lags behind Mozambique's port volume growth (Maputo up 16% previously).
These upgrades signal AfCFTA's (African Continental Free Trade Area) maturing impact, with 50% firm awareness and easier intra-Africa goods movement cited as key enablers. Digital payments now handle 78% of cross-border sales and 79% of purchases via bank rails, mobile money, and PAPSS (Pan-African Payment and Settlement System).
Business Confidence Hits Record High
Business confidence soared to 65 (from 59), the highest recorded, with 83% of firms anticipating revenue growth in three years. Macro stability supports 4.3% GDP growth projection for 2026, fueled by disinflation in seven markets and commodity booms in gold, platinum, and copper. Asia overtook Africa as the top partner (35% vs 32%), reflecting supply chain diversification.
Despite this optimism, trade activity cooled, prompting firms to invest in nearshoring and resilience. Climate shifts affected 38% of businesses, with 32% reporting productivity losses.Read the full press release here.
Intra-Africa Trade: AfCFTA's Growing Momentum
Intra-African trade, at 14.9% of total in 2023, is accelerating under AfCFTA. The Guided Trade Initiative (GTI) now includes 30 countries, facilitating early shipments and tariff reductions. East Africa's success exemplifies this, with harmonized customs and logistics platforms fostering value chains. Mozambique's LNG positions it as an energy exporter, enhancing regional ties, while South Africa's manufacturing edge could rebound with better logistics.
South African firms report 59% exporting to Africa, but taxation (79% priority) and FX shortages hinder full potential. Lessons from Mozambique: Leverage FDI for exports while addressing local content gaps.
Challenges Persist: Taxation, Climate, and FX
Despite gains, 79% of firms demand tax relief, and climate risks loom large. Mozambique's FX backlog exemplifies currency intervention pitfalls, while South Africa's USD 57 million daily logistics losses underscore port/rail needs. Governance support dipped in some markets, but single-window systems expanded in seven.
- Power outages remain top infrastructure drag (e.g., Zambia, Nigeria).
- FX shortages hit Angola, Nigeria hardest.
- Non-tariff barriers persist despite AfCFTA.
East Africa's Lead and Lessons for South Africa
East Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda) shines with export surges from reforms. Tanzania climbed to 4th via road investments; Kenya slipped to 7th amid policy hurdles. South Africa can emulate by fast-tracking Operation Vulindlela and AfCFTA tariff schedules. Universities like Wits and UCT are researching trade economics, training experts for these shifts—vital for higher-ed jobs in economics and international trade.
Implications for South African Businesses and Economy
For South Africa, the slip signals urgency: LNG-like FDI anchors (e.g., renewables) could reclaim leadership. Improved finance access aids SMEs, but firms must diversify to Asia/Middle East. The barometer forecasts resilience, with 21% positive global trade views. Policymakers should prioritize tax reforms and infrastructure to boost intra-Africa share.Khusoko analysis.
Economic growth supports job creation; explore career advice for trade professionals.
Future Outlook: AfCFTA Acceleration and Resilience
With GDP growth at 4.3%, stabilizing inflation, and infrastructure momentum, Africa's trade ecosystem strengthens. AfCFTA harmonization promises industrialization; digital payments and nearshoring mitigate risks. South Africa, with its mature economy, must innovate to match Mozambique's agility. Ongoing barometer monitoring will track these trends.
For South African academics and students, this underscores demand for trade policy expertise—check university jobs in economics.
Photo by Marek Studzinski on Unsplash
Stakeholder Perspectives and Actionable Insights
Standard Bank experts note: "As AfCFTA deepens, Africa's competitiveness accelerates." Businesses should invest in digital tools, diversify partners, and lobby for tax relief. Governments: Modernize borders, support SMEs. South Africa can lead via green trade and skills development. For career growth, faculty positions in business schools are booming.
