Day: December 11, 2025
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Africa’s Creative Revolution: The Next Global Economic Superpower
By Alwalled Kabir Yusuf:Lead Consultant / MD, PR Times AfricaWhat if Africa’s greatest goldmine isn’t oil, gas, or minerals—but creativity?Across the continent, a powerful transformation is unfolding, driven not by pipelines or factories, but by imagination, innovation, and the unstoppable talent of Africa’s young population. From fashion and film to music, gaming, digital content, and storytelling, creative industries are redefining how the world sees Africa. And at the center of this cultural and economic rise stands Nigeria—a nation inspiring the continent with its creative courage and global impact.Today, Africa is no longer on the sidelines of global culture. It is shaping it.Afrobeats sells out arenas across Europe and America.Nollywood’s stories reach audiences far beyond the continent.African fashion houses influence luxury trends from Paris to Milan.Digital creators build pan-African communities that reach millions daily.Nigeria alone—home to one of Africa’s most vibrant creative sectors—is valued at over $25 billion and projected to hit $250 billion. A bold reminder that creativity is not merely entertainment.It is an industry. A pathway. A future.Africa Must Revalue Its Creative GoldmineFor decades, many African countries underestimated the power of arts and entertainment. Yet the new generation has proven something undeniable:Creativity reshapes mindsets, strengthens economies, and builds national identity.1. Creativity drives positive thinking among youth.Young Africans now see people like themselves succeed globally—not because of political connections, but because of talent, discipline, and digital skills. This shift is boosting confidence and reducing hopelessness on a continent where youth make up the majority.2. It creates real, scalable employment.The creative economy is an entire ecosystem: stylists, producers, editors, set designers, animators, writers, developers, photographers, digital marketers, sound engineers, costume makers, and many more.3. It positions Africa as a global cultural influencer.Culture is soft power. When African music, fashion, and film dominate global spaces, they bring investment, visibility, and new economic opportunities.4. It keeps youth engaged and productive.Instead of drifting into negative activity, millions of African youths channel their energy into content creation, tech innovation, music, film, and storytelling.5. It diversifies national economies.Oil declines. Creativity scales.Africa needs industries that are renewable, youth-driven, and globally relevant—and the creative sector is one of the continent’s strongest contenders.The Evidence: Nigeria’s Creative Economy Is BoomingNigeria’s entertainment sector continues to grow at an unprecedented pace.Sector Growth: The arts, entertainment, and recreation industry grew by 4.74% in Q3 2024.Quarterly Contribution: In Q1 2024, the sector contributed N728.80 billion to the economy—up from N576.67 billion in Q1 2023.This growth is driven by both domestic demand and expanding global recognition of Nigerian content, from Nollywood films to Afrobeats tours.A Call to African Leaders, Investors & PolicymakersAfrica cannot afford to ignore the industry shaping its identity in real time.The creative economy needs stronger policies, financing structures, training hubs, and cross-border collaboration—not for entertainment’s sake, but for nation-building.Because:Every creative idea is a job.Every film is a story the world needs.Every song is a bridge between cultures.Every empowered young person becomes an asset not just to their country, but to the continent.Africa is not just a market.Africa is a maker.A maker of culture.A maker of global influence.A maker of trends the world follows.The youth are ready.The world is listening.Now Africa must invest. -

How Northern Nigeria’s Film Industry Is Quietly Shaping Culture Across Continents
Could Kannywood Be the Next Big Thing in Global Cinema?
How Northern Nigeria’s Film Industry Is Quietly Shaping Culture Across Continents
For years, global audiences have searched for fresh storytelling beyond the familiar corridors of Hollywood, Bollywood, and Nollywood. In that search, one cinematic force, quiet yet powerful, has been steadily gaining momentum across Africa and the diaspora. It is Kannywood, the Hausa-language film industry of Northern Nigeria, and it might just be the next breakout voice the world has been waiting for.
While Nollywood dazzles with global premieres and red-carpet acclaim, Kannywood has grown its influence more discreetly. It has become the cultural heartbeat of West Africa’s Hausa-speaking population and an essential voice for communities stretched across the Sahel, the Middle East, and beyond. And now, as the global film landscape shifts toward authenticity, cultural depth, and regional storytelling, Kannywood stands on the brink of international discovery.
A Cinematic Giant Hiding in Plain Sight
Kannywood emerged in the early 1990s from Kano, a city known for its ancient scholarship, bustling trade, and centuries-old storytelling traditions. Unlike film industries born from studio glamour, Kannywood began with modest tools, local crews, and a deep desire to narrate the everyday lives of Northern Nigerians.
The industry blended a unique array of influences:
– Hausa oral poetry and folklore
– Islamic moral storytelling
– Bollywood’s colorful musicals
– Classic West African community-centered narratives
The result was a film culture that prioritized heart over hype, focusing on moral lessons, family ties, faith, and the social pressures shaping Northern society.
Today, its reach is enormous: over 80 million people across Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, Chad, Ghana, Sudan, and diaspora communities consume Kannywood films, often daily.
Why Kannywood’s Storytelling Style Resonates
At the core of Kannywood’s success is a storytelling identity rooted in cultural values. Its films explore:
– generational conflict
– modest romance
– community relationships
– education and women’s empowerment
– justice, faith, and dignity
At a time when global audiences seek cinema that feels real, grounded, and unfiltered by Western norms, Kannywood’s films deliver genuine emotional connection.
This authenticity is what makes Korean dramas trend, Turkish series go global, and Indian cinema transcend borders. Kannywood fits into this same global appetite, yet has not been fully discovered.
A Market Much Bigger Than the World Realizes
One of Kannywood’s greatest untold strengths is the size of its audience. The Hausa-speaking world stretches across borders, forming one of the largest linguistic networks in Africa. This gives Kannywood an organic market larger than that of many European countries.
And unlike casual Western film consumption, Hausa communities watch Kannywood with loyalty, cultural pride, and daily regularity. Films are shared through cinemas, DVDs, satellite TV, YouTube channels, and increasingly, streaming platforms.
For content studios looking for built-in markets, Kannywood is a goldmine.
A Highly Organized Industry with Untapped Global Potential
Few international observers know that Kannywood is one of Africa’s most structured film industries. Actors, directors, producers, editors, and writers all belong to organized guilds that regulate quality and protect member rights.
This professionalism, combined with relatively low production costs, creates an environment perfect for:
– international co-productions
– cross-continental storytelling
– cultural exchange films
– streaming platform investment
As India, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Morocco, and Pakistan explore cultural partnerships across Africa, Kannywood sits at a naturally aligned intersection of language, values, and narrative style.
The Rise of a New Generation of Creatives
Perhaps the most exciting chapter in Kannywood’s journey is unfolding now. A wave of young actors, cinematographers, screenwriters, and digital creators is infusing the industry with new energy. Many have received international training, bringing modern techniques and global awareness back home.
Their films reflect:
– sharper visuals
– tighter scripts
– richer sound quality
– a blend of local authenticity with global relatable themes
This evolution positions Kannywood as a rising contender in the international film ecosystem.
The Soft Power of Hausa Cinema
Beyond entertainment, Kannywood is a cultural ambassador. Its films preserve and promote:
– Hausa language
– Islamic ethics
– social dialogue
– peace and tolerance
– cultural identity in a globalizing world
In an era when cinema is increasingly seen as a tool of diplomacy and cultural influence, Kannywood wields substantial soft power across Africa and the diaspora.
So, Could Kannywood Be the Next Big Thing in Global Cinema?
Absolutely, and the signs are clear.
Global audiences are shifting toward regional stories. Streaming platforms are hunting for non-Western content. Cultural diversity is no longer optional; it’s demanded. And Africa is emerging as one of the most important creative markets on the planet.
Kannywood has:
– a massive existing audience
– distinctive storytelling
– low production barriers
– a rising generation of talent
– built-in cultural alignment with major global markets
All it needs is the spotlight.
As the world widens its cinematic gaze, Northern Nigeria’s film industry is ready, not just to participate, but to lead. And when the world finally looks north, it may find that Kannywood is not merely the next big thing in African cinema, it may be one of the next big things in global cinema.
The northern star is rising. The world just has to look up.