Forgotten Dairies
The Price Of Global Work: Rethinking Outsourcing In Africa -By Vanessa Emeadi
Ethical outsourcing is not about rejecting global work, it is about ensuring that such collaboration is equitable, inclusive, and sustainable. While a number of firms position themselves as ethical outsourcing providers such as Sama, Teleperformance and Majorel, their track records are not without scrutiny. Reports and worker testimonies have raised concerns around wages, working conditions, and the psychological toll of certain roles, particularly in content moderation.
In rural Kenya, there is a young woman spending hours each day moderating some of the internet’s most disturbing content. Like many others across Africa in similar roles, she is likely to earn between $1 and $3 an hour, often with little to no mental health support. However, her counterparts in countries like the United States, doing the same work, earn between $19 and $21 an hour, with proper safeguards in place. This gap is the reality of how global work is currently structured.
Although the Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) sector in Africa already employs an estimated 1.2 million people, creating opportunities for young Africans to work with international companies, earn in foreign currencies, and build careers beyond their immediate environment, many outsourcing firms have been criticised for extreme job insecurity due to high turnover rate, wage disparities, poor working conditions, and limited career progression.
The digital labour platforms connecting these professionals to global clients also play a role, determining who gets seen and who gets hired. In many cases, faster and cheaper work is rewarded.
While workers can technically set their rates, the structure of these platforms often creates an illusion of choice, where being visible and competitive depends on pricing lower rather than pricing fairly. What begins as a way to get a foot in the door gradually becomes a system that undervalues African labour, reinforcing the idea that it should be cheap. One that, once it takes hold, will be hard to undo.
Research shows that Africa’s outsourcing growth is driven as much by cost as by talent, with labour costs up to 80% lower than in Western markets, according to African Business. This raises an uncomfortable question: are companies coming for talent, or simply because it is cheaper?
Much of the work outsourced to African professionals, whether in content moderation, data labelling, or backend digital operations, happens behind the scenes. They support global platforms and even help train artificial intelligence systems, yet their contributions often go unnoticed, and when work is invisible, it is easier for unfair conditions to persist.
The common argument that wage differences reflect cost of living falls short when the work and expectations are identical. This imbalance pushes many African professionals to go elsewhere in search of better pay and a good standard of living, quietly fueling the steady movement of talent out of the continent.
At the same time, the structure of outsourced work calls the long-term sustainability of the BPO sector into question. Research by the Mastercard Foundation indicates that up to 40% of tasks within Africa’s tech-enabled outsourcing sector could be impacted by automation by 2030, especially in lower-level roles. If many of these jobs are both underpaid and at risk of disappearing, what does this mean for the future of Africa’s digital workforce?
As Africa’s outsourcing sector grows into a multi-billion-dollar industry, the choices made today will determine whether it becomes a source of opportunity or a vehicle for exploitation, where location outweighs value.
In all of this, the subtle yet decisive influence of power dynamics shapes the current structure of global work. Much of the demand for outsourced work originates from North America, Europe, and parts of Asia, placing clients in a position to decide who gets paid, how much, and under what conditions. This is why ethical outsourcing matters.
Ethical outsourcing is not about rejecting global work, it is about ensuring that such collaboration is equitable, inclusive, and sustainable. While a number of firms position themselves as ethical outsourcing providers such as Sama, Teleperformance and Majorel, their track records are not without scrutiny. Reports and worker testimonies have raised concerns around wages, working conditions, and the psychological toll of certain roles, particularly in content moderation.
This reveals a deeper issue in Africa’s BPO sector, highlighting the need for consistent standards and accountability among outsourcing firms. It calls for a shift from cost-driven decisions to merit-driven ones, where talent is recognised and compensated based on contribution rather than location alone, alongside greater transparency, better working conditions, and a more intentional approach to how global companies engage African talent.
Vanessa Emeadi is a Media and Communications Specialist and storyteller passionate about youth advocacy, community development, and the future of work in Africa.
