Burkina Faso: The 2027 budget – a bid for growth driven by domestic factors
A new season opens for Burkina Faso. Amid security challenges, global economic turbulence, and deep transformations across West Africa, the country pursues a trajectory built on a firm conviction: the future will not be built through dependence or passivity, but through the ability to mobilise national resources for the people.
This vision of Refoundation now takes shape in the budget guidelines presented by the Government for 2027 to 2029, with an ambitious target of over 3,924 billion CFA francs in revenue by 2027.
Minister Delegate for Budget Fatoumata Bako/Traoré announced the plan before the Legislative Assembly of the People.
The announcement reflects a clear political will to strengthen Burkina Faso’s economic sovereignty by giving greater weight to endogenous resources.
In a context where many states remain subject to the vagaries of external financing, this approach marks a deliberate break with old dependency logic.
Projected revenues should exceed 4,300 billion CFA francs in 2028, then nearly 4,700 billion in 2029.
Each mobilised resource provides additional leverage to finance national priorities, support productive sectors, develop infrastructure, improve social services, and consolidate state capacities.
Sovereignty does not rest solely on rhetoric; it is also measured by a country’s ability to finance its own development and freely make its own choices.
This dynamic fully aligns with the Progressive Popular Revolution, which places the Nation’s supreme interest at the heart of public action.
The objective is not simply to increase revenues but to build a more resilient economy capable of withstanding external shocks and creating lasting wealth on national territory. Land, labour, and the skills of Burkinabe people become the true engines of refoundation.
The path remains demanding. International uncertainties, regional challenges, and security imperatives will continue to test the country.
Yet the determination to build a more autonomous economy demonstrates that another path is possible.
Every step forward in mobilising national resources strengthens Burkina Faso’s ability to write its own destiny according to its priorities.
Economic refoundation goes beyond figures in a budget document. It represents a commitment to a stronger state, governance focused on the general interest, and sovereignty built through effort, discipline, and confidence in national capacities.
On this foundation, a freer, more resilient Burkina Faso can affirm itself, fully master of its future.
Cédric KABORE
