Nobody talks about this enough.
Being a developer in Africa isn't just about writing code. There's an invisible tax you pay every single day that developers in other parts of the world don't think about.
The infrastructure tax
Your internet goes out in the middle of a deployment. Load shedding kills your machine mid-compile. You're debugging a production issue on mobile data because the power has been out for three hours. Meanwhile someone in San Francisco is complaining their office WiFi is slow.
You learn to code defensively. Save often. Work offline where possible. Commit frequently. Not because best practices told you to — because the environment demands it.
The payment tax
You want to buy a course. Pay for a domain. Subscribe to a tool that would make you 10x more productive. But your card doesn't work on Stripe. PayPal is restricted in your country. The workarounds cost more than the product.
You watch free tiers evaporate and can't upgrade. You learn to squeeze everything out of what's free because paid is not always an option.
The visibility tax
You build something real. Something good. But your network is small, your country doesn't trend on tech Twitter, and the algorithm wasn't built for you. Developers in other regions get featured, funded, and followed. You get ignored — not because the work is worse, but because the spotlight doesn't reach here.
The doubt tax
The most expensive one.
When every example you see doesn't look like you. When the success stories are always from the same cities, the same schools, the same backgrounds. You start to wonder if this path is really for you. If you're building toward something real or just running in place.
That doubt is not weakness. It's a rational response to a system that wasn't designed with you in mind.
But here's the thing
Every African developer who ships something — anything — has already cleared a bar that most people don't see. The finished product looks the same. The path to get there didn't.
That's not a consolation prize. That's a genuine edge. Resilience, resourcefulness, and the ability to build under constraint are skills. Hard-earned ones.
We're not behind. We're building on a harder difficulty setting.
Top comments (1)
The overhead is real. Yet embrace it and keep building. #buildinginpublic