Nigeria has emerged as the fifth-best performing country on the continent in the 2026 edition of the Africa Performance Index. Compiled jointly by Jeune Afrique and The Africa Report, the ranking reflects the country's growing economic influence, robust innovation capacity, and regional importance, even as it navigates ongoing governance challenges.
The annual ranking, now in its second edition, evaluates African nations using a proprietary methodology that extends far beyond traditional economic indicators like Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Instead, it measures trajectories across three key pillars—governance, influence, and innovation—offering a broader, forward-looking assessment of how countries are positioning themselves for long-term growth and competitiveness.
The Continental Leaderboard
South Africa retained its position at the top of the index, maintaining a comfortable lead over its peers. The report attributed its first-place ranking to exceptional performances in the influence and innovation dimensions, supported by its strong academic and scientific ecosystem, deep diplomatic reach, entrepreneurial activity, and global platform membership in the BRICS bloc and the G20.
Mauritius moved into second place on the back of sustained institutional stability, an attractive business environment, and successful economic diversification.
Namibia emerged as the index's biggest riser, jumping from 15th place all the way to third. The southern African nation was rewarded for significant improvements in governance, infrastructure development, financial market performance, and tax collection.
Morocco ranked fourth, consolidating gains from years of targeted investments in infrastructure, manufacturing, renewable energy, and sports development.
The Outlook for Nigeria
Similar to South Africa, Nigeria’s overall score was weighed down by domestic governance challenges, a falling GDP per capita over the reference period, and high debt levels. Despite these pressures, Nigeria locked in the number five spot because it remains an undisputed continental heavyweight. Its rank was heavily driven by the massive scale of its domestic market, its widespread cultural and diplomatic influence, and its high capacity for tech innovation.
The top ten is rounded out by Egypt in sixth, followed by Rwanda (7th), Ghana (8th), Côte d'Ivoire (9th), and Kenya (10th).
Ultimately, the 2026 data highlights a highly dynamic West African corridor. Fueled by the economic rivalry between Accra and Abidjan, alongside the sheer market scale of Nigeria, the sub-region is steadily cementing its status as one of the continent's most competitive and vital economic zones.
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