The World Economic Forum has announced its intention to resume its regional Africa summit in April 2027, marking the end of a seven-year intermission prompted by the global COVID 19 pandemic. The summit is scheduled to take place in South Africa, with Johannesburg and Cape Town identified as potential host cities.
Chido Munyati, Head of Africa at the World Economic Forum, confirmed the plan in an interview with CNBC Africa during the organisation’s annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland. The decision to revive the Africa summit represents not only a logistical return to in person convenings but a broader recommitment to engaging with the African continent on its own terms amid significant global flux.
The most recent Africa summit was hosted in Cape Town between 4 and 6 September 2019. Since then, large-scale international forums were widely suspended due to the public health and logistical challenges posed by the pandemic. In the intervening years, the absence of regular regional summits curtailed many face-to-face engagements that previously enabled in-depth dialogue among African policymakers, global investors, and civil society actors.
The planned return of the Africa summit takes place within a vastly different global and continental context. African economies continue to confront the enduring repercussions of the pandemic while simultaneously addressing long standing structural challenges. These include youth unemployment, infrastructure deficits, climate vulnerability, and shifting dynamics in global trade and investment. However, a more holistic reading of the continent reveals a landscape of nuanced resilience, where policy innovation, intra African cooperation, and new economic sectors are shaping a multifaceted recovery.
Historically, the WEF Africa meetings have served as a key platform for dialogue on investment, governance, digital transformation, regional integration, and sustainable growth. They bring together heads of state, business leaders, academics, and social actors, offering a rare convergence of perspectives and agendas. The 2027 summit is expected to reintroduce Africa’s priorities within the broader global economic conversation while centring African-led visions of development and cooperation.
While the Forum remains headquartered in Geneva and continues to operate within global frameworks, the decision to return to Africa signals more than geographic realignment. It gestures towards an understanding that meaningful dialogue must be rooted in context specific realities and grounded in the aspirations of African societies. The summit provides an opportunity to move away from reductive portrayals of Africa as either risk or opportunity and instead foreground the agency, diversity, and interconnected challenges that define the continent today.
As the continent navigates a pivotal moment marked by both urgency and possibility, platforms such as the Africa summit can serve as catalysts for inclusive growth and equitable partnerships. Whether these dialogues yield substantive policy outcomes will depend on the extent to which they centre African knowledge systems, local ownership, and accountable leadership rather than external prescriptions.
In this regard, the 2027 WEF Africa meeting holds the potential to contribute not only to continental debates but also to reshape global narratives about Africa in ways that are collaborative, historically informed, and forward looking.







