Africa AI transformations Coach and Thought Leader, Adeoye Abodunrin, has called on African governments, policymakers and institutions to deliberately integrate behavioural economics insights into Artificial Intelligence (AI) strategies, warning that technology-driven reforms without human-centred design risk deepening inequality across the continent.

Speaking to journalists during a media briefing in Lagos, Abodunrin stressed that Africa’s AI future must be shaped not only by advanced algorithms and infrastructure, but by a deep understanding of human behaviour, decision-making and socio-cultural realities.

“AI will only deliver inclusive growth in Africa if we design systems that understand how Africans think, decide, trust and adapt,” Abodunrin said.

“Without behavioural economics, AI policies may look impressive on paper but fail at the level that matters most, people.”

Abodunrin, who is being formally introduced to the Nigerian press as an Africa AI Transformations Coach & Thought Leader, noted that many AI strategies across the continent focus heavily on technology acquisition while overlooking behavioural incentives that influence adoption, productivity and trust in public systems.

According to him, behavioural economics provides governments with critical tools to design AI-enabled policies that work in real African contexts, from digital identity systems and financial inclusion platforms to healthcare delivery, education, taxation and public service reform.

“Africa does not suffer from a lack of ideas or talent,” he explained. “What we often miss is alignment, aligning technology with behaviour, culture and incentives. Behavioural intelligence is what turns AI from a shiny tool into a development engine.”

Dwelling on recent data from the Google & Ipsos: “Our Life with AI: Helpfulness in the Hands of More People” report, Abodunrin highlighted that Nigeria is emerging as a global leader in AI adoption, with usage patterns that point to the technology’s rapid integration into learning, work, entrepreneurship and everyday problem-solving.

“AI holds immense potential for Africa, but we cannot prioritise infrastructure and algorithms while ignoring the human behaviour that determines how these technologies are used, trusted and trusted by citizens,” Abodunrin said. “In the AI era, behavioural insight is not optional, it is fundamental to inclusive growth, innovation and social impact.”

Nigeria’s AI Adoption Leads Globally
According to the report:

· 93% of Nigerians use AI tools to learn and understand complex topics, significantly above the global average of 74%.

· 88% of Nigerian adults have used an AI chatbot – far ahead of the global average of 62%, demonstrating deep integration of AI into daily life.

· 91% of Nigerians use AI to assist with their work, while 80% leverage AI to explore new business ideas or career transitions – nearly double the global average (42%).

· 91% believe AI is positively impacting learning and access to information, with 95% saying students and educators are likely to benefit.

· 80% express excitement about AI’s possibilities, compared with a global average far lower, illustrating strong optimism and agency in technology adoption.

“These figures show that Nigerians, especially young learners, professionals and entrepreneurs, are not only adopting AI at scale but using it purposefully for growth and opportunity,” Abodunrin noted.

Why Behavioural Economics Matters for AI Policy

Abodunrin explained that while adoption figures are impressive, they also underscore the need for governments and institutions to design policies that align AI tools with social realities, such as trust, incentives, cultural norms and decision-making patterns unique to African contexts.

“Behavioural economics helps us understand how people actually interact with AI systems, what motivates adoption, and how policies shape outcomes across diverse communities,” he said.

“Without these insights, AI strategies risk leaving behind the very people they aim to empower.”

He urged leaders to integrate behavioural frameworks into AI governance, regulatory design, public services and education initiatives to promote inclusive innovation and equitable access to digital opportunities across demographics.

A Call to Action for African Institutions

Abodunrin’s remarks come at a pivotal moment when Nigeria and other African nations are experiencing rapid growth in digital technology usage and are poised to shape the future of innovation on the continent.

He encouraged policymakers to embed behavioural science principles into AI policy formulation; invest in capacity building and AI literacy at all levels; ensure AI governance frameworks reflect ethical, cultural and human values, and support locally-relevant AI solutions that address real-world challenges.

“AI should amplify African strengths, not widen global divides,” Abodunrin said. “When behavioural economics informs AI strategy, we unlock not just smarter technology but smarter societies.”