Morocco Eyes $10 Billion AI Windfall by 2030, Powering Youth-Employment, Skills and Digital Sovereignty
Morocco is projecting and placing focus majorly on artificial intelligence as a new engine of growth, aiming to add 100 billion dirhams (about $10 billion) to its economy by 2030. The plan, announced by Digital Transition Minister Amal El Fallah Seghrouchni, could reshape not only the country’s GDP but also family livelihoods, workplace culture and Morocco’s political standing in Africa’s fast-growing digital economy.
With GDP currently near $170 billion, the government’s AI strategy is ambitious. It focuses on building sovereign data centres, expanding cloud and fibre-optic infrastructure, and training a new generation of AI-skilled workers. Officials project the creation of 50,000 AI-related jobs and the training of 200,000 graduates over the next five years—numbers that, if realised, could significantly ease youth unemployment and reduce pressure on families that depend on informal or low-wage work.

At the household level, the promise of stable, higher-skilled jobs could help strengthen Morocco’s middle class. For many families, especially in urban centres like Rabat and Casablanca, AI-linked careers offer a pathway away from job insecurity. At the same time, there are concerns that communities without access to quality education or connectivity could be left behind, widening social and regional inequalities if investments are not evenly distributed.
Culturally, the initiative signals a shift toward a knowledge-driven economy, encouraging universities to work more closely with industry. AI centres planned in partnership with higher education institutions could help retain talent that might otherwise leave the country. Businesses, from manufacturing to logistics and public services, are expected to adopt AI tools to improve efficiency, potentially lowering costs but also forcing traditional sectors to adapt quickly.

Politically, the strategy strengthens Morocco’s push for digital sovereignty. Planned AI legislation, a $1.2 billion digital transformation budget for 2024-2026, and a proposed 500-megawatt renewable-powered data centre in Dakhla underscore the state’s desire to control its data and reduce reliance on foreign infrastructure. A partnership with France’s Mistral AI also reflects a diplomatic balance, seeking global expertise while building local capacity.
If successful, Morocco’s AI drive could position the country as a regional hub for data science and innovation. The challenge will be ensuring that the gains translate beyond GDP headline figures into inclusive growth that touches families, communities and small businesses, turning technological ambition into everyday social progress.
