Africa: World Bank Group Provides $137 Million to Help Accelerate Digital Integration and Job Creation in Benin, Liberia and Sierra Leone

Africa: World Bank Group Provides 7 Million to Help Accelerate Digital Integration and Job Creation in Benin, Liberia and Sierra Leone


Boosting broadband access to 5.2 million people, enabling 5.4 million new digital service users, nurturing 140+ startups, and unlocking thousands of digital jobs in a growing regional economy.

WASHINGTON, March 10, 2026 – The World Bank Group (WBG) Board of Directors today approved a transformative regional initiative that will directly boost job creation in Benin, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. This second operation under the Western Africa Regional Digital Integration Program (WARDIP), totaling $137 million, aims to strengthen the foundations for a dynamic digital economy through three core pillars: (i) expanding and upgrading the digital infrastructure needed for competitiveness; (ii) fostering a more business-friendly environment; and (iii) enabling businesses to scale and operate across regional markets.

WARDIP2 will increase broadband access, financing, and usage in participating countries and will enable an environment for cross-border digital services in Western Africa. Approximately 5.2 million people will be connected to new or enhanced broadband internet across the three countries, and 5.4 million new users will access digitally enabled services.


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This new initiative positions West Africa to accelerate economic transformation by creating jobs, strengthening resilience, and enabling a more integrated regional digital market,” says Michel Rogy, World Bank Digital and AI Regional Practice Director. “It addresses one of the region’s most persistent challenges: high-cost and unreliable connectivity that limit competitiveness and people’s access to digital opportunities.”

Through major investments in digital infrastructure, the project will expand resilient broadband networks, increase international connectivity, and strengthen data-center capacity, laying the groundwork for new digital jobs and improved public and private-sector service delivery. At the same time, it will invest in people by supporting digital skills training for 9,000 individuals, including women and youth, and expanding opportunities in AI, cybersecurity, and entrepreneurship.

By harmonizing regulations, modernizing digital governance, and improving competition across regional markets, WARDIP2 creates a more predictable and investment-friendly environment,” says Marina Wes, acting World Bank Regional Integration Director for Africa. “Its support to the West Africa Economic and Monetary Union (WAEMU), regulatory reforms in participating countries, and measures that lower deployment costs while expanding access to affordable, high-quality connectivity are critical to deepening regional integration, unlocking private capital, and creating jobs.”