Introduction
From the bustling markets of Freetown to the high‑altitude farms of the Himalayas, a common story repeats itself: entrepreneurs see clear demand for their products, yet the money needed to grow remains out of reach. Frontier markets – the group of least‑developed countries identified by the United Nations – are home to roughly one billion people, or about 13 % of the global population, but they capture less than 1 % of worldwide foreign direct investment (FDI). This gap is not just a statistic; it represents missed opportunities for jobs, innovation, and progress toward the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Why frontier markets require long‑term capital
Short‑term financing cycles often clash with the realities of building businesses in environments where infrastructure, regulatory frameworks, and consumer habits are still evolving. Investors who can commit capital for five‑to‑ten‑year horizons are better positioned to weather early‑stage volatility and reap the rewards of structural transformation.
The growth drivers
Several macro‑trends underpin the long‑term promise of frontier economies:
- A youthful labour force – the median age in many LDCs is under 20, creating a expanding pool of workers and consumers.
- Rapid urbanisation – cities such as Dakar, Lusaka, and Kathmandu are growing at rates exceeding 3 % per year, spurring demand for housing, retail, and services.
- Deepening digital ecosystems – mobile‑phone penetration now tops 80 % in several frontier markets, enabling e‑finance, agritech, and health‑tech solutions that were unimaginable a decade ago.
These forces translate into tangible business opportunities. For example, British International Investment (BII) notes that its African portfolio generated an average internal rate of return (IRR) of roughly 12 % between 2018 and 2023, demonstrating that patient capital can deliver competitive financial results while supporting development impact1.
Risks of short‑term thinking
When investors seek quick exits, they often avoid sectors with longer gestation periods – such as agro‑processing, renewable energy, or manufacturing – precisely where the biggest developmental gains lie. This reluctance fuels a cycle of underinvestment, leaving viable projects stranded and reinforcing the perception that frontier markets are “too risky.”
Partnerships that turn potential into investability
Capital alone cannot fix fragmented financial systems or weak institutional capacity. Success comes from aligning money with expertise, local knowledge, and risk‑sharing mechanisms that build trust among all stakeholders.
Blended finance and coalitions
The African Resilience Investment Accelerator (ARIA) illustrates this approach. Launched in 2022 by BII, the Dutch development bank FMO, and the French institution Proparco, ARIA brings together public‑sector guarantees, concessional loans, and technical assistance to de‑risk early‑stage ventures. As of 2024, the facility has mobilised over US$500 million of blended finance for more than 120 companies across 12 frontier economies, helping them attract follow‑on commercial investment2.
Local‑level collaborations
Effective partnerships also involve domestic banks, regulators, and business associations. By co‑designing credit guarantee schemes, streamlining licensing procedures, and sharing market intelligence, these collaborations reduce information asymmetry and create the predictability that private capital requires.
Technical assistance: building pipelines and market readiness
Even with the right financial structures, entrepreneurs often need help turning a good idea into a bankable project. Targeted technical assistance bridges that gap, strengthening both the supply of investable opportunities and the capacity of local financial intermediaries to evaluate them.
Advisory services in practice
The International Finance Corporation’s (IFC) Advisory Services in frontier markets have supported more than 3 000 small and medium‑sized enterprises (SMEs) since 2020, providing guidance on business planning, financial modelling, and environmental‑social governance. Participants in these programmes have seen their average loan‑to‑value ratios improve by roughly 18 %, making them more attractive to lenders3.
Capacity building for financial intermediaries
Training programmes for local banks and microfinance institutions focus on risk assessment, loan structuring, and portfolio monitoring. In Sierra Leone, a joint initiative between the Central Bank and a European development agency increased the share of bank lending to productive sectors from 9 % to 14 % within two years, illustrating how skill transfer can expand the flow of credit to businesses that need it most4.
Conclusion
Frontier markets are not charity cases; they are economies with demonstrable growth trajectories that remain under‑financed due to mismatched investment horizons, perceived risks, and insufficient support structures. By pairing long‑term, patient capital with strategic partnerships and targeted technical assistance, investors can unlock opportunities that deliver both financial returns and meaningful development impact. The evidence from BII, ARIA, IFC, and numerous local initiatives shows that when the right tools are applied, the promise of leaving no one behind moves from aspiration to achievable reality.


