Africa: The G20 2025 in Johannesburg – A Defining Moment for the Global South

Africa: The G20 2025 in Johannesburg – A Defining Moment for the Global South


The 2025 G20 Summit, scheduled for 22–23 November 2025 in Johannesburg, marks the first time the gathering is held on African soil.

Under the theme “Solidarity, Equality, Sustainability,” South Africa aims to shift the centre of gravity of global economic governance toward the priorities of the Global South. Yet the historic moment arrives overshadowed by the absence of the leaders of both the United States and China, sparking debate about the future direction of multilateralism.

South Africa’s presidency has placed bold objectives on the table: reforming global financial systems, securing debt sustainability for developing nations, driving a just energy transition, enhancing food security, and tackling global inequality through a newly established committee of independent experts. For the first time in G20 history, inequality is not a supporting conversation — it is a primary agenda item.

The Missing Giants


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The U.S. president’s decision not to attend — framed through criticisms of South Africa’s domestic issues — comes at a time when Washington is consumed by internal political turmoil and legal controversies. While diplomatically significant, his absence may ironically open space for more stable, constructive negotiations. Without the polarising presence that often dominates such summits, developing nations may find more room to assert their collective interests.

China’s president is also not attending, with Beijing opting to send its premier instead. This reflects a mix of domestic political recalibration and strategic positioning amid heightened global tension. Some view the move as quiet alignment with Russia, whose leader cannot attend; others see it as China’s preference for institutional engagement rather than leader-driven diplomacy at this moment.

Africa at the Centre

With the world’s two superpowers stepping back at leadership level, the G20 risks losing some global clout. But it also creates an unprecedented window: an opportunity for middle-power nations and the developing world to shape the agenda on their own terms.

For Africa, this may be the most consequential G20 yet. With the African Union now a permanent participant, and with South Africa steering the presidency, the continent holds its strongest-ever position within global economic decision-making. The core issues being discussed — debt, climate finance, food systems, and industrialisation — are Africa’s most urgent priorities.