In 2000, Morocco's economic footprint in sub-Saharan Africa was minimal. Today, Moroccan companies are among the largest employers in West Africa, with major presences in banking, telecommunications, insurance, real estate, and phosphate-based agriculture across more than 35 African countries.

This transformation is the product of deliberate state strategy. King Mohammed VI has made the reorientation toward sub-Saharan Africa a personal and national mission, undertaking more state visits to African capitals than any other head of state globally over the past decade. Trade and investment have followed the diplomatic groundwork.

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Banking: The Vanguard

Attijariwafa Bank, Banque Centrale Populaire, and BMCE Bank of Africa together operate over 1,200 branches across 30+ African countries, serving an estimated 8 million customers. They are now among the top five commercial banks by branch network in West Africa, having acquired local banks in Côte d'Ivoire, Senegal, Mali, Cameroon, and beyond.

Moroccan banks have brought with them not only capital but retail banking expertise, mobile banking platforms, and trade finance capabilities that were scarce in many of the markets they entered. Their presence has materially improved financial inclusion and credit availability in several West African markets.

Phosphates and Agricultural Strategy

OCP Group, Morocco's state phosphate company, is the world's largest phosphate exporter and Africa's dominant producer of fertilisers. OCP's Africa strategy, selling fertilisers tailored to African soil types at concessionary prices to smallholder farmers, is simultaneously commercial and geopolitical.

The company has signed long-term offtake agreements with Ethiopia, Nigeria, Ghana, and Rwanda, providing locally-formulated fertilisers at subsidised rates. In exchange, it has secured market positions that would be difficult for competitors to displace. African food production and food security is thus embedded in OCP's commercial model.

The Tanger Med Anchor

Tanger Med, Morocco's flagship port complex on the Strait of Gibraltar, has grown into Africa's largest container port by throughput, handling over 9 million TEUs annually. Its connectivity, with direct vessel services to 186 ports across 77 countries, makes it an increasingly important transshipment hub for African cargo bound for European and Asian markets.

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