Afrobarometer’s data literacy initiative in Lusophone Africa highlights how survey data is reshaping evidence-based governance and media ecosystems across Mozambique and peer economies.

Data as an economic and governance asset
Reliable data has become a strategic input for policymaking, media credibility, and civic accountability across African economies. In Lusophone Africa, however, access to data has often outpaced the capacity to interpret it effectively. Against this backdrop, Afrobarometer has intensified its focus on data literacy, targeting journalists, civil society organisations, and academic researchers across Portuguese-speaking countries. This approach reflects a growing recognition that public debate improves when data is not only available, but also well understood and responsibly communicated.
The initiative aligns with broader continental efforts to strengthen governance through evidence. Institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund increasingly emphasise data transparency as a foundation for economic reform. In Lusophone Africa, improving analytical skills among information intermediaries helps translate macro-level data into insights that resonate with citizens and decision-makers.
Building capacity across Lusophone ecosystems
Afrobarometer’s training programme brings together professionals from Mozambique, Angola, Cabo Verde, Guinea-Bissau, and São Tomé and Príncipe. These countries share linguistic ties, yet face distinct development trajectories and institutional challenges. By focusing on practical skills such as interpreting survey results, contextualising public opinion data, and avoiding statistical misrepresentation, the initiative strengthens the quality of public discourse across diverse national settings.
Moreover, the programme responds to a structural gap in many media markets, where economic and governance reporting often lacks empirical grounding. As a result, public narratives can become fragmented or overly anecdotal. Data literacy addresses this gap directly. It enables journalists and analysts to frame policy debates around measurable trends in trust, service delivery, and democratic participation.
Implications for policy and accountability
The economic relevance of data literacy extends beyond media practice. When civil society and researchers engage confidently with survey evidence, policy dialogue becomes more constructive and targeted. In Mozambique, for instance, survey data can inform discussions on fiscal governance, public service delivery, and social inclusion. This reinforces reform agendas led by institutions such as the Banco de Moçambique and the Ministério da Economia e Finanças.
At a regional level, Lusophone Africa’s engagement with structured data also enhances comparability with non-Portuguese-speaking peers. This is particularly relevant as African policymakers increasingly benchmark progress using continental datasets and governance indicators produced by the African Development Bank and other multilateral actors.
Positioning data at the centre of development narratives
Ultimately, Afrobarometer’s data literacy initiative underscores a subtle but important shift. Data is no longer treated solely as a technical resource for economists. Instead, it is becoming a shared language across media, academia, and civil society. For Lusophone Africa, this evolution supports more informed economic narratives and strengthens the institutional foundations required for sustainable development.
Source: Further Africa
