Ericsson's June 2025 Mobility Report release gives the headline: service providers in Sub-Saharan Africa are leaning into fintech and fixed wireless access while 4G and early 5G deployment gradually replace legacy technologies. The useful point is not the forecast number by itself. It is the commercial pressure behind it. If mobile data demand rises but consumer ARPU remains constrained, operators need services that make the access network more than a prepaid-data pipe.

That is why mobile money sits next to radio and core-network modernisation in this story. Ericsson's partnership extension with MTN placed MTN Mobile Money on the Ericsson Wallet Platform and described an African customer base with tens of millions of active MoMo users. MTN's separate core-network modernisation work with Ericsson in Nigeria and South Africa points to the infrastructure side of the same problem: payments, broadband, enterprise services and 5G standalone readiness need a cleaner core, not only more towers.

AXIAN Telecom gives the second piece of evidence. Ericsson and AXIAN announced modernisation work across Madagascar and Tanzania, including radio access, microwave transport, core systems, 4G expansion and 5G launch activity. That does not prove a continent-wide Ericsson win. It shows the shape of demand: African operators are upgrading network layers in places where mobile access, fixed broadband substitutes and digital-finance services increasingly meet in the same customer relationship.

The risk is that the rhetoric of inclusion outruns the operating economics. Fixed wireless access can expand household and small-business broadband where fibre is hard to justify, but it also consumes spectrum, backhaul and site capacity. Mobile money deepens customer attachment, but it raises reliability, security, API and regulatory expectations. Ericsson benefits if operators buy those capabilities as one modernization agenda. It loses force if fintech, FWA and 5G remain separate product claims rather than integrated network spending.