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Botswana has secured a US$200 million (approximately P2.7 billion) policy-based loan from the OPEC Fund for International Development, formalised during Vice President and Finance Minister Ndaba Gaolathe’s recent visit to Austria. This facility is set to co-finance Botswana’s Governance and Economic Resilience Support Programme (GERSP), in collaboration with the African Development Bank, which approved US$304 million in funding for the country in April 2025.

According to an official statement released by the OPEC Fund, the loan aims to advance fiscal sustainability, improve governance frameworks, and bolster economic resilience. The GERSP framework underscores reforms in fiscal performance, anti-leakage tax systems, and the introduction of a national digital procurement platform. These policy conditions were mutually agreed upon with the African Development Bank and form the basis for both loans.

Vice President Gaolathe’s engagement in Austria also entailed finalising a Country Partnership Framework with the OPEC Fund, marking a structured roadmap for collaboration from 2025 to 2029. While the specific funding volumes or terms under this framework have not yet been disclosed, the OPEC Fund noted that its future cooperation with Botswana will target sectors such as renewable energy, infrastructure development, innovation, and digital transformation. These interventions are intended to stimulate export-led private sector growth and enhance long-term national competitiveness.

The OPEC Fund highlighted that its support, alongside that of the African Development Bank, would enable Botswana to create fiscal space for targeted development investments. These include efforts to facilitate trade and investment, promote the growth of small and medium-sized enterprises, and advance inclusive economic initiatives benefitting youth, women, and marginalised groups.

A policy-based loan, such as the one secured from the OPEC Fund, is contingent on the recipient government implementing agreed structural reforms. In Botswana’s case, this involves tightening public financial management, fostering an enabling environment for private sector participation, and embedding sustainability measures into fiscal operations.

The Finance Ministry recently acknowledged its domestic borrowing had reached the statutory ceiling, prompting the shift towards external funding options. Besides the OPEC and African Development Bank packages, the Ministry is also pursuing a facility from the World Bank. However, neither the scale nor the terms of the World Bank funding have been publicly disclosed.

Botswana’s latest external financing efforts come amid a widening fiscal deficit, projected to surpass the P22.12 billion initially forecast in the February 2025 national budget. The government anticipates improved revenue performance later in the year, especially through a possible rebound in diamond exports, as part of its strategy to stabilise public finances.

These multilateral financing arrangements signal growing confidence in Botswana’s reform agenda and long-term economic prospects. The structural conditions embedded in the GERSP are aligned with the country’s broader ambitions for economic diversification, institutional accountability, and inclusive development.

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