In an interview with the Guardian, Akinwumi Adesina, head of the African Development Bank, says the outlook is good for a continent with the workers of the future and the best investment opportunities.
Africa holds the future workforce for the ageing economies of the west, according to one of the continent's leading financial figures, who also said it was time to ditch the myths around corruption and risk.
In an exclusive interview before this weekend's World Bank meetings in Morocco, Akinwumi Adesina said there was a resurgence of belief in Africa's economic prospects and attacked negative stereotyping, adding that there was "every reason to be optimistic".
Now midway through his second five-year term as president of the African Development Bank (AfDB), the Nigerian former agriculture minister said the continent's demographic advantage, expanding middle class, and vast investment opportunities meant a shift was underway.
The global financial crisis that brought the world down in 2008 - that was not in Africa. We have no Wall Street.
"And not before time - we're tired of being at the bottom of the value chain," Adesina said. "The fastest way to poverty is through exporting raw materials, but the highway to wealth is through global value chains by adding value to everything you have, from oil to gas to minerals to metals and food. We must add value.
"The issue is we have to invest right; we have to make sure the governance environment is right; we have to make sure the incentives are right. Africa must take a position that it is no longer going to be at the bottom but at the top."
Established in 1964, the AfDB is Africa's only AAA-rated financial institution, focused on what Adesina said were his "high fives": enabling universal access to electricity, improving quality of life, industrialising, food self-sufficiency, and integrating the continent's 54 countries to create larger and more efficient markets.
"I don't think that you can have development with pride unless you can feed yourself," he said.
Ghana's Pokuase interchange, near Accra. Africa's default rate on infrastructure projects is the lowest in the world, says Adesina.
Read the full interview here: