Business

10 of Africa’s lowest-income economies in 2025


At a Glance


  • Conflict, weak institutions, and climate shocks keep Africa’s lowest-income countries behind.
  • Untapped natural resources and young populations could drive future economic growth.
  • Structural challenges limit income, but strategic investment may unlock long-term opportunities.

Africa’s growth story often highlights booming fintechs and billion-dollar deals, but some countries lag behind.

In 2025, ten African nations report the lowest GDP per capita, reflecting persistent poverty, conflict, and weak institutions.

These countries, Burundi, Central African Republic, Sierra Leone, Madagascar, Mozambique, Niger, Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan, Malawi, and Somalia, face structural challenges that limit income growth.

Yet, untapped natural resources, young populations, and investment potential could unlock long-term economic opportunities for investors and development financiers. Understanding these low-income economies is key to identifying future growth hotspots.

Persistent poverty constrains domestic consumption, weakens human capital, and limits state capacity. At the same time, low income levels often mask untapped assets: arable land, minerals, energy reserves, and young populations that could drive future growth if stability and governance improve.

Shore Africa profiles Africa’s 10 lowest-income countries in 2025, based on GDP per capita estimates from multilateral institutions.

Rather than a ranking of failure, it is a snapshot of structural constraints, and potential inflection points.

Understanding why these economies lag is essential to assessing where reform, capital, and political stability could eventually unlock value at scale.

1. Burundi — GDP per capita: $231
Burundi remains Africa’s poorest country as political fragility and subsistence agriculture dominate economic life. Limited exports, weak infrastructure, and low productivity keep incomes depressed, despite a young population and significant agricultural potential.

2. Central African Republic — $467
Chronic conflict and minimal state control continue to cripple the Central African Republic’s economy. Rich in diamonds, gold, and timber, the country struggles to convert natural wealth into income amid insecurity and poor transport networks.

The Central African Republic (CAR) doesn’t have its own national apex bank; instead, it uses the Bank of Central African States (BEAC) (Banque des États de l’Afrique Centrale), a regional central bank for the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa (CEMAC)

3. Sierra Leone — $480
Sierra Leone’s economy relies heavily on mining and agriculture, leaving it vulnerable to commodity swings. Governance challenges and infrastructure gaps have slowed diversification, even as post-war stability has gradually improved macroeconomic conditions.

4. Madagascar — $491
Geographic isolation and underinvestment weigh on Madagascar’s income levels. Despite strong biodiversity, agriculture and light manufacturing dominate, while weak logistics and energy shortages constrain tourism and export-led growth.

5. Mozambique — $547
Mozambique’s income remains low despite massive offshore gas discoveries. Debt distress, climate shocks, and insurgency in the north have delayed the translation of resource wealth into broad-based prosperity.

6. Niger — $552
One of the world’s fastest-growing populations, Niger struggles with desertification, insecurity, and low industrial activity. Uranium exports offer revenue, but agriculture remains vulnerable to climate volatility.

Niger does not have its own independent national central bank. Instead, it is one of eight member states of the West African Economic and Monetary Union (UEMOA) that share a common regional central bank.

7. Democratic Republic of Congo — $567
The DRC is resource-rich but income-poor. Vast copper and cobalt reserves contrast sharply with weak institutions, infrastructure deficits, and insecurity that prevent mineral wealth from lifting average living standards.

8. South Sudan — $581
Oil dominates South Sudan’s economy, but conflict and fiscal instability undermine income growth. Heavy dependence on crude exports leaves the country exposed to price shocks and governance risks.

9. Malawi — $600
Malawi’s economy is anchored in rain-fed agriculture, making incomes highly sensitive to weather patterns. Population pressure and limited industrialization continue to cap productivity and household earnings.

10. Somalia — $614
Despite decades of instability, Somalia’s private sector shows resilience through trade and remittances. Still, weak central governance and security challenges keep per capita income among Africa’s lowest.

Feyisayo Ajayi

Feyisayo Ajayi is the Publisher and Co-founder of Shore Africa, the flagship media brand under the Travel Shore umbrella. He brings over a decade of multidisciplinary experience across media, finance, and technology. Feyisayo holds a bachelor’s degree in Geology from the University of Ibadan, Nigeria.

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