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    Gov’t halves spending after freezing purchase orders

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    The government has executed one of the most abrupt expenditure corrections in Botswana’s modern fiscal history, cutting monthly spending by almost half after suspending and centralising Government Purchase Orders (GPOs). 

    The move, introduced quietly in mid-2025 and revealed in detail in the 2026 Budget Speech, was a fundamental shift in how the state controls money in an economy long accustomed to public spending as the dominant growth engine.

    In the months before the reform, government procurement had reached alarming levels. “In the three (3) months preceding the decision, Government spending through GPOs averaged approximately P1.14 billion per month,” Finance Minister Ndaba Gaolathe told Parliament on Monday. Between April and June 2025 alone, total commitments amounted to P3.41 billion.

    That trajectory was abruptly reversed when the Ministry of Finance temporarily centralised the issuance of GPOs in July 2025. The results were immediate. “Following the centralisation of GPOs, average monthly spending declined significantly to approximately P584 million between July 2025 and January 2026 or 49 percent reduction in monthly expenditure levels,” Gaolathe said.

    The government framed the decision not as austerity for its own sake, but as an emergency intervention to halt what Gaolathe repeatedly described as “financial haemorrhaging within Government.” For years, ministries had relied on commitment letters and off-budget obligations that allowed spending to continue even after allocations were exhausted. That practice has now been scrapped.

    The GPO clampdown did not occur in isolation. It was reinforced by a moratorium on both domestic and international travel, tighter controls on overtime payments, and a hard line against supplementary budgets. “Over the last two financial years, 2024/25 and 2025/2026, no supplementary budget requests have been approved,” Gaolathe said, calling this “a decisive break from past practices.”

    “These measures were implemented to curb the accumulation of unfunded obligations,” the finance minister said, arguing that the sharp decline in spending confirmed that “centralised oversight has been effective in curbing non-essential procurement, improving expenditure discipline and reducing fiscal leakages across Government.”

    The GPO clampdown did not occur in isolation. It was reinforced by a moratorium on both domestic and international travel, tighter controls on overtime payments, and a hard line against supplementary budgets. “Over the last two financial years, 2024/25 and 2025/2026, no supplementary budget requests have been approved,” Gaolathe said, calling this “a decisive break from past practices.”

    The context is unforgiving. Diamond revenues have weakened, foreign-exchange reserves have declined, and Botswana’s fiscal buffers have been largely depleted. As of November 2025, the Government Investment Account stood at P2.91 billion, down from P37.2 billion in 2014. Net financial assets have shifted from a surplus equivalent to 40 percent of GDP in 2008 to a deficit of over 30 percent by 2024.

    Rather than raise taxes or borrow aggressively, the government has chosen administrative discipline as its first line of defence. The next phase will be technological. Cabinet has approved a National e-Procurement Strategy, with a fully digital system expected before the end of the 2026/27 financial year. Once operational, it is expected to “restore transparency, integrity, enhance efficiency and value for money across the entire public procurement cycle.”

    The implications go beyond accounting. “This Budget signals a fundamental shift in how growth will be driven,” Gaolathe said, “away from dependence on public spending as the primary engine of opportunity.”

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