Botswana’s retirement industry is beginning to confront an uncomfortable reality: many workers are not preparing emotionally, psychologically or financially for life after work, and the consequences could spill beyond households into the wider economy.
That was the central warning from speakers at the inaugural NMG Retirement Wellness Summit hosted Thursday by NMG Administrators Botswana in Gaborone, where regulators, pension fund administrators, employers and policymakers gathered to discuss what they described as a looming “retirement readiness” challenge.
While pension discussions traditionally focus on savings and payouts, the summit shifted attention to something far more personal, fear, anxiety and the emotional shock that often accompanies retirement.
NMG Botswana CEO Motshabi Mokone said too many Batswana only begin thinking seriously about retirement in their late 50s, when their options have already narrowed.
“The decisions that you make years before your retirement often determine whether you retire with confidence or whether you retire with anxiety,” Mokone said.
She warned that retirement has become a national issue touching families, workplaces and economic resilience, arguing that the industry can no longer treat pension administration as merely a commercial service.
“We don’t view it as a commercial transaction,” she said. “It’s a responsibility for people and a responsibility for Botswana.”
The summit repeatedly returned to one troubling theme: financial stress is increasingly becoming a mental health issue.
Senior Employee Benefits Consultant One Mokokwe said neuroscience research shows people tend to make poor financial decisions during major life transitions such as retirement, divorce or bereavement because emotions overwhelm rational thinking.
“Gallup research has consistently shown that 70 percent of people’s decisions are emotional and only 30 percent are rational,” she said.
Her presentation revealed striking findings from a retirement readiness survey conducted among pension fund members. Despite most respondents having stable employment over the past decade, 90 percent said they did not have emergency savings, while debt obligations and family responsibilities were identified as the biggest financial pressures.
Only 35 percent expressed confidence that they would have enough income to maintain their standard of living in retirement.
The findings also revealed widespread financial vulnerability hidden beneath outward stability. Nearly half of respondents said financial worries sometimes or always affected their daily wellbeing, while many admitted they had never consulted a financial adviser or attended retirement wellness training through their employers.
Mokokwe argued that retirement planning must move beyond spreadsheets and contribution rates to include emotional preparedness, behavioural patterns and lifestyle habits.
“The personal side of money is often ignored, yet it comes with consequences,” she said.
Acting Finance Ministry Permanent Secretary Sayed Timuno widened the discussion further, warning that inadequate retirement preparedness is becoming a macroeconomic concern for Botswana.
He said longer life expectancy, the rise of contract work and growing fiscal pressure on government are reshaping the retirement landscape in ways that require urgent reforms.
“Retirement adequacy is no longer a personal financial issue. It is a national economic and fiscal imperative,” Timuno said.
He cautioned that poorly prepared retirees eventually fall back on government-funded social safety nets, increasing pressure on public finances.
The summit also highlighted changing employment patterns, with gig work, career transitions and informal employment creating gaps in pension contributions that could produce a future generation of financially insecure retirees.
Throughout the discussions, delegates repeatedly stressed that retirement wellness should be treated as part of overall employee wellbeing rather than as an issue only addressed near retirement age.