Junior Achievement Africa Delivers 1.6 million Learning Experiences annually | Grows 12 times within Five Years

Over that period, the organization grew from delivering 200,000 learning experiences per year in 12 countries to more than 1.5 million in 23 countries, a transformation driven by stronger systems, governance, digital infrastructure, and a shared commitment to execution excellence

Junior Achievement Africa Delivers 1.6 million Learning Experiences annually | Grows 12 times within Five Years

Junior Achievement Africa, one of the continent’s largest youth-serving organizations, released its Annual Impact Report, documenting a landmark year of growth, innovation, and deepening impact across 23 African countries.

The report reveals that Junior Achievement (JA) Africa delivered 1,637,137 learning experiences during the Fiscal Year 2025, more than 12 times the 131,260 experiences delivered five years earlier in the financial year 2021.

The report for the fiscal year which ended in June 30, 2025, reveals that Africa is the fastest-growing region within the global Junior Achievement (JA) Worldwide network.

Over the same five-year period, JA Africa has delivered a cumulative 4,269,881 learning experiences in entrepreneurship, financial capability, work readiness, Science, Technology, English and Mathematics (STEM), and sustainability across the African continent.

The Fiscal Year 2025 report closes JA Africa’s “Boundless” strategic cycle, a five-year framework developed in partnership with Accenture built on four pillars: Accelerate Digital, Empower the Underserved, Cultivate Partnerships, and Strengthen OneJA.

Over that period, the organization grew from delivering 200,000 learning experiences per year in 12 countries to more than 1.5 million in 23 countries, a transformation driven by stronger systems, governance, digital infrastructure, and a shared commitment to execution excellence.

“Scale was never the goal in itself, impact was,” said Simi Nwogugu, President of JA Africa.

“What stands out most is not only how much we have grown, but how intentionally we have grown.”

Among the report’s standout achievements is the Social Equity Program (SEP), supported by the Z Zurich Foundation, which exceeded every target in Fiscal Year 2025, delivering learning experiences to 53,970 young people who were not in education, employment, or training across seven countries, 115 percent of its set target, and running 476 bootcamps, double the projected number.

The program’s impact extended well beyond the classroom: 554 youth launched social enterprises addressing water scarcity, malnutrition, waste, and climate; 1,006 graduates secured employment within six months of completing the program; 521 jobs were created through SEP-supported enterprises; and 3,618 social impact projects were designed by participants.

In Burkina Faso, JA Africa formalized a three-year partnership with the Ministry of Youth and Entrepreneurship Promotion, signaling growing government ownership of youth empowerment at the national level.

JA Africa’s Digital Entrepreneurship Education Program (JA DEEP), launched with support from the Citi Foundation and upgraded with backing from the Z Zurich Foundation, recorded its highest-ever adoption this year with 66,546 participants completing core modules.

More than 50 percent of participants were women, and more than 2,000 went on to pitch business ideas or transition into internships and apprenticeships.

In Tanzania, the Junior Achievement’s Digital Entrepreneurship Education Program alumnus Mohammed Salim Suleiman used the program’s training to launch the Akili Hub LMS, a digital learning platform for secondary school students.

Akili Hub LMS is an extensive learning management system designed to improve education through AI-powered tools, collaborative features, and mobile accessibility and was subsequently selected for the Mastercard Foundation EdTech Fellowship 2025.