The Bank of Botswana says reducing food imports and expanding exports beyond diamonds are crucial to preserving reserves and strengthening economic resilience
BONGANI MALUNGA
Bank of Botswana Governor Lesego Moseki has renewed calls for Botswana to accelerate import substitution, warning that the country’s heavy dependence on imported food and consumer goods is placing significant pressure on foreign exchange reserves while exposing the economy to external shocks.
Speaking during the Bank of Botswana Economic Media Briefing last week, Moseki said Botswana’s consumption patterns have become one of the biggest drivers of reserve depletion, making economic diversification an urgent priority.
“The biggest consumer of Botswana’s reserves is the consumers. We are an import intensive economy, we import oil, food etc. A typical shopper’s basket usually has minimal Botswana products, that’s where the reserves are going. We have maintained that we need to diversify the economy for import substitution and to increase our export based away from diamonds. We need to produce Botswana goods that can compete in international markets and get more revenue from other sources other than diamonds,” he stated.
IMPORT INTENSIVE
According to the latest Statistics Botswana Food and Beverage Imports Report for March 2026, Botswana imported P636.8 million worth of food and beverages during March, representing 12.7 percent of the country’s total imports of P5.03 billion for the month.
Although food imports declined by 38.7 percent from P1.04 billion recorded in February, they remain among the country’s largest import categories, demonstrating Botswana’s continued reliance on foreign suppliers for everyday consumer products.
The report shows that cereals accounted for the largest share of food imports at P115.5 million, representing 18.1 percent of total food and beverage imports. Beverages, spirits and vinegar followed at P90.9 million or 14.3 percent, while miscellaneous edible preparations reached P63.9 million. Preparations of cereals, flour, starch and pastry products contributed P53 million, with sugars and confectionery accounting for a further P50.2 million.
DEPENDENT ON IMPORTS
Within the cereals category, maize constituted 39 percent of imports, followed by wheat at 33.1 percent and rice at 26 percent, illustrating Botswana’s continued dependence on imported staple foods. Beer made from malt dominated beverage imports with a 35.5 percent share, ahead of fermented beverages at 22.3 percent and flavoured non-alcoholic drinks at 14.8 percent.
According to Moseki, reducing this dependence requires faster implementation of projects that enable local industries to expand production and compete internationally.
“There are projects whereby the government is trying to diversify the economy but that needs agility from the public sector in terms of provision of necessary infrastructure to support businesses,” he added.
INJECTION OF LIQUIDITY INTO THE ECONOMY
The central bank has also urged government to adopt a counter-cyclical fiscal policy, arguing that increasing public expenditure during periods of economic slowdown would inject liquidity into the economy, stimulate domestic production and help cushion Botswana against global economic shocks.
BoB believes that a combination of stronger local production, an expanded export base beyond diamonds and supportive fiscal policy will not only reduce the country’s import bill but also preserve foreign exchange reserves and build a more resilient economy capable of withstanding future external disruptions.