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DFC CEO Ben Black Highlights Africa's Strategic Economic Promise at Atlantic Council Forum

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Summary

DFC CEO Ben Black delivered the opening keynote at the Atlantic Council's 'Investing in Africa Forum' on April 16, 2026, on the margins of the 2026 IMF-World Bank Spring Meetings. Black underscored Africa's central role in future global economic growth, citing the continent's expanding markets, workforce, consumer bases, and vast reserves of critical minerals including cobalt, lithium, titanium, and graphite. The speech outlined DFC's strategic approach to investing in energy, technology, infrastructure, logistics, healthcare, and financial services across Africa as part of U.S. economic statecraft to counter geopolitical competitors.

“...President Trump recognized this threat when he created DFC to encounter the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative. We serve as the international investment arm of the U.S. government, and we are America's international deal team.”

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DFC CEO Ben Black delivered the opening keynote at the Atlantic Council's 'Investing in Africa Forum' on April 16, 2026, emphasizing Africa's strategic importance to future global economic growth and supply chains. The speech highlighted Africa's rapidly expanding population, workforce, and consumer markets, as well as vast deposits of critical minerals including cobalt, lithium, titanium, and graphite essential for batteries, semiconductors, and advanced manufacturing.

The remarks positioned DFC as America's international deal team working to counter geopolitical competitors, emphasizing transparency and benefits to local economies over opaque financing and coercive debt arrangements. Affected parties include U.S. development finance stakeholders, African partner countries seeking investment, and companies in sectors including energy, technology, infrastructure, critical minerals, healthcare, and financial services.

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Apr 22, 2026

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DFC CEO Ben Black Highlights Africa’s Strategic Economic Promise at Atlantic Council Forum



Media Release

April 17, 2026

WASHINGTON D.C. – U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) CEO Ben Black delivered the opening keynote at the Atlantic Council’s “Investing in Africa Forum” yesterday on the margins of the 2026 International Monetary Fund-World Bank Spring Meetings. CEO Black underscored how Africa will be central to the success of future global economic growth and supply chains, driven by its rapidly expanding markets and vast reserves of critical minerals, energy resources, and industrial potential.

On Africa's Future and Global Growth:

“...[T]he future of global growth and supply chains will run through Africa. Indeed, in many ways, Africa is ground zero for our shared economic future. Africa's population, workforce, and consumer markets are expanding faster than any other region in the world. We see opportunities across the continent to invest in key sectors, energy, technology, infrastructure and logistics, critical minerals, health care, and financial services.”
On Africa's Reserves of Critical Minerals:

“Africa is home to vast reserves of the world's critical minerals, rich deposits of cobalt, lithium, titanium, and graphite. Indispensable materials for batteries, semiconductors, jet engines, and night vision goggles position Africa to shape the future of supply chains, central to advanced manufacturing, and how we live our modern lives. Developing Africa's stores of active pharmaceutical ingredients would help diversify critical medical supply chains. Energy and transmission infrastructure, would dramatically expand energy capacity and provide a power supply that could support midstream refining outside of China.”
On Geopolitical Competitors:

“Our geopolitical competitors have invested heavily across the continent. But too often, these projects have relied on opaque financing, tied procurement, and infrastructure designed primarily to serve external interests. In many cases, the outcome has been high and coercive debt burdens, and limited benefits to the workers and local economies. This is not a good deal for any nation...”

“...President Trump recognized this threat when he created DFC to encounter the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative. We serve as the international investment arm of the U.S. government, and we are America's international deal team.”
On DFC’s Partnerships across Africa:

“We are investing in our partner countries’ economic futures and their people. Africa is a critical market of the future, and a vital partner in this effort.”

“We want to structure investments that can transform and improve economic trajectories for entire regions while advancing the U.S.'s strategic interests abroad. It's time to stop talking about Africa's potential and time to start delivering on its promise. By investing in infrastructure, fostering private sector lead growth, and advancing regional stability; we can build a future of shared prosperity for Africa's continued growth and success.”
These remarks have been lightly edited for clarity.

The U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) is the international investment arm of the United States Government and central to U.S. economic statecraft. DFC mobilizes private capital to advance U.S. foreign policy and economic development. Our investments deliver strong returns for American taxpayers, drive meaningful economic development for our allies and partners, and secure supply chains to counter and outcompete our adversaries.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
DFC
Published
April 17th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Investors Government agencies Energy companies
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Development finance International investment Strategic economic partnerships
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Financial Services
Operational domain
Finance
Topics
International Trade Government Contracting

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