As oil prices surge and gold rallies, the US–Israel–Iran war is splitting Africa into commodity winners and inflation-hit losers, exposing deep structural vulnerabilities.
The US–Israel–Iran war is reshaping Africa’s economic fortunes, creating clear winners and losers as oil surges and gold cements its role as a financial lifeline.
Across the continent, the shock is immediate and uneven. Countries rich in oil and gold are seeing windfalls, while energy importers are grappling with rising inflation, widening trade deficits, and renewed currency pressure.
At the heart of this divide lies a familiar but increasingly consequential reality: Africa’s deep dependence on commodities – and its limited control over how they are processed, priced, and consumed.
For Ghana, the continent’s leading gold producer, the crisis presents a paradox. The surge in gold prices, driven by global uncertainty, is boosting export revenues and strengthening foreign reserves. Yet the same conflict is pushing up oil prices, threatening to reverse recent gains in inflation and the easing of monetary policy.
This duality – windfall on one side, vulnerability on the other – is becoming the defining feature of Africa’s economic response to the war.
Nigeria and Angola, Africa’s largest oil exporters, are also benefiting from higher crude prices. For governments under fiscal pressure, the windfall offers breathing room, boosting revenues and easing budget constraints.
But The Gains Are Far From Straightforward
Both countries still import significant volumes of refined fuel, exposing them to the same price shocks affecting oil-importing nations. The result is a familiar cycle: rising export earnings alongside domestic fuel inflation – a structural contradiction that has long undermined Africa’s resource wealth.
South Africa, meanwhile, is emerging as an unlikely beneficiary. As global markets scramble for energy alternatives, demand for coal has picked up, supporting exporters. In a world disrupted by conflict, even transition fuels are finding renewed relevance.
In the Sahel, rising gold prices are strengthening the hand of military-led governments in Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger. These countries, already leaning into resource nationalism, are increasingly positioning gold as a tool of economic sovereignty — and geopolitical leverage.
Yet for every winner, there are several losers.
Kenya, Senegal, and Côte d’Ivoire – all heavily dependent on imported fuel – are facing mounting pressure. Rising oil prices are feeding directly into transport costs, food prices, and overall inflation, complicating policy choices for central banks already navigating fragile recoveries.
In Senegal, recent trade data underscores the vulnerability. A sharp drop in exports, driven by falling gold shipments, has already pushed the country back into deficit — even before the full effects of higher oil prices are felt.
Egypt is confronting a double shock. Higher energy import costs coincide with reduced revenues from the Suez Canal as geopolitical tensions disrupt shipping routes. For an economy already under strain, the war is amplifying existing vulnerabilities.
Ethiopia, one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies, is also exposed. With near-total reliance on imported fuel and logistical dependence on Red Sea routes, any sustained disruption risks spilling over into inflation and supply chain instability.
A Continent Divided By Commodities
What is unfolding is not merely a temporary shock, but a structural realignment.
The war is accelerating a shift towards what investors increasingly describe as a “two-speed Africa” — one defined by commodity exposure.
On one side are countries with exportable resources tied to global demand shocks — oil, gold, and increasingly critical minerals. These economies are benefiting from higher prices, improved trade balances, and, in some cases, stronger currencies.
On the other side are economies without such buffers, where higher import costs are eroding purchasing power, widening deficits, and increasing debt risks.
The divide is also exposing a deeper issue: Africa’s limited capacity to capture value from its own resources.
Despite being rich in oil, much of the continent still imports refined fuel. Despite its vast gold reserves, much of the value chain remains external. This structural gap is now being laid bare by geopolitical turmoil.
The Implications For Policy Are Profound
For central banks, rising oil prices threaten to derail disinflation efforts. Countries like Ghana, which had begun easing interest rates amid falling inflation, may now be forced to reconsider their stance if fuel-driven price pressures persist.
For governments, the challenge is balancing short-term windfalls with long-term stability. Higher commodity revenues offer an opportunity — but only if they are channelled into diversification, infrastructure, and value addition.
For Investors, The Message Is Becoming Clearer
Africa is no longer a single story. It is a patchwork of opportunities and risks, increasingly shaped by global geopolitics.
Gold is emerging as a macroeconomic anchor, offering stability in uncertain times. Oil remains both a blessing and a curse — a source of revenue, but also of volatility. And critical minerals, from lithium to cobalt, are quietly positioning the continent at the centre of future supply chains.
Yet the war is also raising uncomfortable questions.
Can Africa finally break free from its dependence on raw commodity exports? Will countries invest in refining capacity and industrialisation, or continue exporting value abroad? And can policymakers navigate the current shock without repeating past cycles of boom and bust?
For Now, The Answers Remain Uncertain
What is clear, however, is that the US–Israel–Iran conflict is not just a distant geopolitical event. It is a powerful economic force, reshaping Africa’s trajectory in real time – and deepening the divide between those who gain and those who fall behind.
By Kent Mensah




