Pretoria, South Africa – As global sentiment towards Africa turns sharply pessimistic, with aid cuts, foreign investment retreating, and governance scores stagnating, one structural fact remains: the continent is becoming demographically unavoidable.Africa is home to 1.6 billion people today, a figure projected to double by 2061.According to the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA), Africa’s population is projected to reach 2.5 billion by 2050, making it the fastest-growing region in the world.In his book How Africa Works, Joe Studwell argues that Africa may only now be reaching the population density required to sustain broad-based growth.Density, in this framing, is not a burden to manage but a condition for takeoff, the foundation for deeper markets, larger labour pools and the agricultural transformation that underpins industrial development.For decades, population growth was treated as Africa’s constraint. The question now is no longer whether the continent has enough people, but whether it can organise them productively and quickly enough.The market that numbers buildBy 2040, Africa’s working-age population is projected to exceed that of India and China combined, according to the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA).Cities such as Nairobi, Lagos, Accra and Dar-es-Salaam are evolving from administrative centres into dense consumer markets and labour hubs. Africa’s population boom br …