As Botswana confronts one of the most complex economic transitions since independence, the spotlight has fallen, rightly, on fiscal strategy, diversification, and private-sector dynamism. Yet beneath the policy discourse lies a quieter, more consequential pillar of stability: the institutional authority and technical depth of the Bank of Botswana.
The 2026/27 Budget Strategy Paper outlines a difficult balancing act. Growth has slowed, mineral revenues are volatile, fiscal buffers are thinner, and expectations for reform are rising. In such an environment, macroeconomic credibility becomes not a background condition, but an active policy instrument. Botswana’s ability to navigate this transition without destabilising inflation, capital flight, or currency volatility depends critically on the central bank’s expertise, and on the continuity of that expertise.
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