The governments of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger have jointly inaugurated a regional investment bank with an initial capitalisation of 500 billion CFA francs (approximately $895 million), marking a strategic move towards strengthening financial autonomy and regional development.
The new institution aims to fund large-scale infrastructure, energy and agricultural projects across the three Sahel nations, each of which faces acute development challenges compounded by political instability, security threats and climate-related pressures. According to Bloomberg, the bank will pool financial resources from the three mineral-rich countries, leveraging their natural wealth to stimulate sustainable growth and reduce dependency on external donors.
Finance ministers from the respective nations described the establishment of the bank as a significant step toward regional self-determination in development financing. Burkina Faso’s Finance Minister, Aboubakar Nacanabo, said after the signing ceremony in Bamako, the Malian capital, that the creation of a development bank represents “a matter of financial stability, economic development and the financing of strategic projects.”
The project builds upon earlier announcements made in July, reported by Business Insider Africa, which outlined that approximately five percent of each country’s annual tax revenues would be allocated to capitalise the new financial institution. This collective approach is intended to anchor the bank’s operations in domestic fiscal resources, signalling a deliberate effort to foster fiscal resilience and economic sovereignty.
The initiative reflects a broader regional reorientation following the withdrawal of Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). The three nations have voiced concerns that the regional bloc failed to provide adequate support in confronting violent insurgencies that have destabilised parts of the Sahel. Their coordinated actions indicate a growing commitment to redefine regional cooperation frameworks outside traditional multilateral arrangements.
Mali’s Finance Minister, Alousséni Sanou, confirmed that the bank is now operational, with its foundational capital secured. The next phase involves the appointment of executive leadership charged with mobilising further investment from both domestic and regional partners. Sanou emphasised that the bank’s mandate includes prioritising long-term stability and regional integration rather than short-term profit motives.
The launch of the regional investment bank represents an effort to construct a more autonomous financial architecture in the Sahel, reflecting a shift towards homegrown solutions to persistent economic and developmental constraints. It underscores an emerging vision in African economic policy that seeks to centre African agency in addressing structural challenges, while maintaining pragmatic engagement with international financial systems.
By positioning the new bank as both a symbol and an instrument of economic sovereignty, Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger are asserting their determination to recalibrate the terms of their participation in the global financial order. While success will depend on governance standards, institutional credibility and effective regional coordination, the initiative stands as a notable attempt to reshape Africa’s developmental narrative from within.







