MOROCCO · ECONOMY
Key Facts
—A $650m commitment: The World Bank approved two programmes worth a combined $650 million for Morocco on 12 June 2026.
—The digital piece: A $250 million Digital Transformation Acceleration Program backs the national Digital Morocco 2030 strategy.
—AI, startups, a sovereign wallet: The plan funds AI innovation, startup financing, the digitisation of small firms and a National Sovereign Wallet tied to the ID card.
—Private capital alongside: The programme is expected to mobilise close to $200 million in private capital through government-backed risk-sharing.
—Resilience too: A second, larger programme strengthens Morocco’s defences against climate, disaster and cyber risks.
—Why it matters: The financing is a vote of confidence in Morocco’s reform path and its bid to be one of Africa’s digital front-runners.
Morocco’s digital transformation has won a $650 million boost from the World Bank, approved in June 2026 to accelerate the kingdom’s Digital Morocco 2030 strategy and harden its defences against climate, disaster and cyber risks. It is one of the larger single commitments yet to the country’s technology ambitions.
RTAsk Rio TimesAsk about Latin American markets, currencies, and companies — answered from our reporting and live data.Start asking →
What the Morocco digital transformation funding covers
The World Bank’s board approved two programmes worth a combined $650 million on 12 June 2026.
The larger piece for technology is a $250 million Digital Transformation Acceleration Program, designed to advance the national Digital Morocco 2030 strategy.
It will fund end-to-end online access to public services through a single national portal, a shift of government systems to the cloud, and financing for the country’s startup ecosystem.
A second, larger programme strengthens Morocco’s financial resilience against climate, disaster and cyber shocks.
A bet on AI, startups and a sovereign wallet
The digital programme reaches well beyond e-government. It supports artificial-intelligence innovation, the digitisation of small and medium-sized businesses, and an expansion of the country’s digital talent pool.
One of its signature ideas is a National Sovereign Wallet, anchored to the national identity card, that would let citizens store and share official documents securely online.
The plan is expected to mobilise close to $200 million in private capital through government-backed risk-sharing for startups and small-business digitisation.
The World Bank says it is targeting measurable results by 2031, with a focus on drawing young people and women into the digital economy.
Why Morocco is pushing so hard
Morocco has spent years positioning itself as a bridge between Europe, Africa and the Gulf, courting investment in cars, aerospace, finance and now technology.
A modern digital state is central to that pitch, making it cheaper to do business and easier to attract the offshoring and technology jobs the country wants.
The kingdom is also preparing to co-host the 2030 World Cup, a deadline that has sharpened the drive to modernise infrastructure and public services.
Casablanca already markets itself as a financial gateway to the continent, and digital infrastructure is the next layer of that ambition.
The country has also drawn factories from European and Asian carmakers, giving it an industrial base few African economies can match.
For a young population, the promise is jobs; for the government, it is competitiveness.
A pattern of World Bank backing
The new programmes build on a run of recent support. In April 2026, the World Bank approved a separate $500 million package to back Morocco’s jobs and green-growth agenda.
Together, the commitments show a lender willing to underwrite Morocco’s twin push on technology and climate.
The Bank’s Morocco portfolio spans energy, water, finance and social protection, one of its largest engagements in North Africa.
They also reflect Morocco’s standing as one of the World Bank’s busier clients in the region, with a reform record that draws steady financing.
The latest money ties disbursement to specific reforms and results, rather than arriving as a simple loan.
What it signals to investors
For international investors, the financing is a vote of confidence in Morocco’s reform path and its relative stability in a turbulent region.
Morocco’s capital market has been climbing this year, helped by domestic investors, adding to the sense of momentum.
Development-finance money like this is rarely transformative on its own, but it can reduce the risk of projects and pull in private capital alongside it.
The figures are official targets and timelines, which can shift as programmes are rolled out, so the real test will be delivery rather than announcement.
What to watch next
The near-term signals are practical. Watch whether the unified services portal and the sovereign wallet move from plan to working systems.
Foreign investors will also watch how quickly the promised private capital actually arrives.
The longer-term measure is whether the money translates into startups funded, businesses digitised and jobs created by the 2031 targets.
For now, the commitment underlines a simple ambition: Morocco wants to be one of Africa’s digital front-runners.
Frequently asked questions
How much did the World Bank approve for Morocco?
The World Bank’s board approved two programmes worth a combined $650 million on 12 June 2026. They support Morocco’s digital transformation and its resilience against climate, disaster and cyber risks.
What does the Morocco digital transformation programme fund?
The $250 million Digital Transformation Acceleration Program backs the Digital Morocco 2030 strategy, funding online public services, a move to cloud systems, AI innovation and startup financing. It also supports a National Sovereign Wallet tied to the national identity card.
Will the funding attract private investment?
The programme is expected to mobilise close to $200 million in private capital through government-backed risk-sharing for startups and small-business digitisation. The World Bank is targeting measurable results by 2031.
Why is Morocco investing in digital transformation?
Morocco wants to cut the cost of doing business, attract technology and offshoring jobs, and create work for its young population. A modern digital state supports its pitch as a gateway between Europe, Africa and the Gulf.
The Rio Times · Power Map
See who really holds power in Latin America
Click to open the Power Map →
View original source — Rio Times ↗