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India returns to Africa stage after 11 years: Trade expansion or strategic counter to China?

India is set to host the fourth India-Africa Forum Summit (IAFS-IV) in New Delhi later this month, marking its first high-level engagement with African leaders in over a decade, as New Delhi attempts a strategic reset in a continent where China has significantly expanded its economic and infrastructure footprint.

The summit, scheduled from May 28 to May 31, will bring together African heads of state, business leaders and multilateral representatives under the theme “India Africa strategic partnership for innovation, resilience, and inclusive transformation (IA SPIRIT)”, according to official briefings released by India’s Ministry of External Affairs.

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A decade-long gap

The revival of the summit comes nearly 11 years after the last edition in 2015, and at a time when global supply chains, energy security and geopolitical alignments are undergoing rapid shifts.

According to a report by the Economic Times, the upcoming summit will focus on trade, investment, digital infrastructure, fintech, sustainability and capacity building, while also strengthening defence and maritime cooperation.

The summit signals a broader recalibration in India’s Africa policy — moving away from state-backed concessional credit lines toward private-sector-led investment at a time when African economies are demanding equity financing and faster project execution.

The timing is significant. Bilateral trade between India and Africa has already expanded from around $75 billion in 2015 to about $103 billion in FY2025, underscoring Africa’s growing weight in India’s external economic engagement.

Investment model under pressure to evolve

Over the past decade, India has extended more than 190 lines of credit worth over $10 billion across 41 African countries, financing projects in power, water supply, transport, agriculture and digital connectivity. However, implementation remains a key concern for policymakers and analysts.

Analysts note that a significant portion of India’s Africa-linked commitments face implementation delays, with only around 40 per cent of commitments fully implemented on the ground.

This shift is changing India’s engagement strategy. New Delhi is encouraging more Indian private companies to invest in African agriculture, infrastructure and manufacturing. The focus is gradually moving away from government-backed credit lines towards market-driven investment models.

China comparison

While India avoids explicitly framing its Africa policy as a counter to China, the structural comparison is unavoidable.

China remains Africa’s largest trading partner and dominant infrastructure financier, with deep involvement across ports, railways and energy corridors, while India has positioned itself more narrowly around capacity building, digital public infrastructure and skill development.

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The Horn of Africa and the western Indian Ocean have become particularly sensitive zones, where maritime security, shipping lanes and port access intersect with broader Indo-Pacific competition involving China, Gulf states and Western powers.

Strategic geography and maritime calculus

India’s Africa strategy is increasingly tied to securing Indian Ocean shipping routes that carry energy and trade flows between West Asia, East Africa and Asia, with expanded naval cooperation and maritime surveillance partnerships across key littoral states.

India’s engagement has shifted from episodic peacekeeping to sustained strategic presence, including development partnerships in Somalia, Kenya and Ethiopia alongside growing interest in supply chain-linked resources.

The expansion of India’s diplomatic footprint in Africa reflects a shift toward institutionalising engagement, moving beyond episodic summits to sustained political and commercial presence across the continent.

Diplomatic expansion and institutional presence

Since 2018, India has opened 16 new diplomatic missions across Africa, taking its total presence to 45 countries on the continent. This expansion is part of a broader effort to institutionalise engagement rather than rely on periodic summit diplomacy.

The upcoming summit is also expected to showcase flagship initiatives such as India’s education and technology projects, including the IIT Madras campus in Zanzibar, which has been positioned as a model of skills and innovation cooperation.

Beyond diplomacy

Despite expanding ambition, the central challenge for India remains consistency of delivery.

African governments are increasingly seeking investment-led partnerships and faster project execution timelines, particularly in infrastructure, energy transition and industrial development.

For India, this creates a structural test: whether its diplomatic outreach can be matched by private capital mobilisation and on-ground implementation capacity at scale.

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The real outcome of the summit will be measured not in declarations, but in whether Indian capital, companies and institutions can scale meaningfully into African markets.

First Published:
May 04, 2026, 12:54 IST

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