Africa’s Sound Is Global, But Where Is the Money?
African music is everywhere.
Talk about Afrobeats, talk about Amapiano, the sound of the continent has gone global.
Artists are selling out arenas, topping charts, and pulling in billions of streams across platforms like Spotify and Apple Music.
But behind the global success lies a more uncomfortable truth.
Africa is barely making money from its own cultural exports.
Despite the growth, Sub-Saharan Africa contributes less than 0.4% of global music revenue. That means while the world is listening, the financial rewards are going somewhere else.
The music is travelling, the money isn’t.
Same Song, Different Money
One of the biggest reasons for this gap comes down to a simple but unfair reality: not all streams are equal.
An artist can get one million streams in Nigeria and earn a fraction of what they would make from the same number of streams in the United States or the United Kingdom.
The difference is not about popularity, it is about pricing.
Streaming platforms pay artists based on subscription revenue. In wealthier countries, users pay higher monthly fees. In many African markets, subscription prices are significantly lower, sometimes less than a dollar per month.
That means even when African music dominates globally, streams coming from within the continent generate far less income.
Same song. Same audience. Completely different payout.
The System Isn’t Built for African Artists
Beyond streaming economics, there is a deeper structural issue.
Most of the major platforms that distribute African music are not owned on the continent. Spotify, Apple Music, and other digital streaming services control how music is shared, discovered, and monetised.
Africa creates the content, but it does not control the system.
Then there are the middlemen.
Collective Management Organizations (CMOs), which are supposed to collect and distribute royalties to artists, have struggled across several African countries.
Issues like delayed payments, poor transparency, and even mismanagement mean that artists often do not receive the money they are owed.
Even when revenue exists, it does not always reach the people who created the music.
And then there is the knowledge gap.
Many artists are building global audiences without fully understanding how royalties, publishing rights, and metadata work. Without proper registration, international earnings can simply disappear into the system.
The music is successful but the structure around it is broken.
Africa Makes the Music, But Doesn’t Own the Business
At its core, this is not just a music problem. It is an ownership problem.
Africa is exporting culture at a massive scale, but it does not yet own the infrastructure that turns that culture into sustainable wealth.
That includes:
Distribution platforms
Royalty collection systems
Legal and policy frameworks
Data and metadata control
Until these systems are strengthened and controlled locally, the imbalance will continue.
More streams alone will not fix the problem, more visibility will not fix it either.
What matters is who controls the pipeline, from creation to payment.
African music has already won global attention and that part is no longer in doubt.
The real question now is whether Africa can build the systems that ensure that attention finally translates into value.
Because right now, the world is dancing to African music.
But Africa is still waiting to be paid.
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