Botswana has issued a cautious economic outlook as a growing stockpile of unsold diamonds, coupled with a drop in global demand and persistent trade barriers, places strain on the nation’s mineral-driven economy.
According to the 2026/27 Budget Strategy Paper released by the Ministry of Finance on 21 January, the country is currently holding approximately 12 million carats of diamonds, nearly twice the official threshold of 6.5 million carats. The oversupply, driven by weakened international demand and increased competition from synthetic alternatives, has created an economic impasse for one of Africa’s most diamond-reliant nations.
As the world’s second-largest diamond producer after Russia, Botswana remains heavily dependent on the precious stone, with diamonds contributing close to one third of its gross domestic product and constituting a significant proportion of government revenue. However, current market dynamics have begun to undercut that foundation. The Ministry’s paper explains that production levels are unlikely to increase in the near term due to limited capacity for further stockpiling, suggesting a temporary production stagnation while existing inventories are gradually reduced.
Global demand, particularly in the United States and China—the two largest diamond consumer markets—has softened amid macroeconomic pressures and shifting consumer preferences. Retailers in both countries have scaled back purchases, responding to growing consumer interest in lower-cost, lab-grown stones. This shift marks a structural change in the global diamond market, raising deeper questions about the long-term sustainability of natural diamond revenues for producing nations across the continent.
Adding further complexity to Botswana’s position are external trade pressures, including a 15 percent tariff imposed by the United States and heightened duties in other key markets such as India. These have created unfavourable conditions for exporting rough diamonds, compressing profit margins and delaying the potential for market recovery.
The Ministry forecasts that average prices for rough diamonds will fall to 99.3 US dollars per carat in 2025, a sharp decline from 128.8 US dollars recorded in 2024. Should prices fall further in the remaining months of the fiscal year, mineral revenues are likely to dip below current projections. The government has revised its expected mineral revenue to 10.3 billion pula, or approximately 770 million US dollars, for 2025/26. This represents a substantial reduction compared to the long-term average of 25.3 billion pula, indicating a steep downturn in a historically stable revenue stream.
While the causes of this downturn are partially exogenous, the policy document also highlights internal vulnerabilities. A drop in foreign reserves and declining government savings have compounded fiscal constraints, limiting room for manoeuvre in monetary and exchange rate policy. The Ministry has acknowledged that these economic pressures are likely to endure beyond the current fiscal cycle, potentially altering the structure of Botswana’s economy over the medium to long term.
After contracting by three percent in 2024, Botswana’s economy is expected to shrink by a further one percent in 2025. These figures reflect more than temporary volatility; they reveal the fragility of a growth model dependent on finite extractive resources and heavily influenced by external market conditions.
The current crisis is emblematic of broader patterns affecting African resource economies. Botswana’s situation echoes challenges seen elsewhere on the continent where fluctuating global commodity markets, limited value addition, and external trade regimes intersect to produce economic instability. In this context, Botswana’s experience is not merely a national story but a continental case study in the risks of economic concentration and the urgency of diversification.
As the country moves forward, a key question remains: how can Botswana, and by extension other mineral-rich African economies, transition towards more resilient and diversified economic frameworks? While natural endowments have long served as a foundation for development, the emerging structural shifts in global markets call for policies that balance short-term revenue needs with long-term transformation strategies.
Botswana’s government has acknowledged the scale of the challenge and appears poised to exercise caution in fiscal planning. Whether this moment catalyses a broader economic reconfiguration or results in deeper entrenchment of existing vulnerabilities will depend on the decisions taken in the months ahead.







