Gaborone, Botswana – With global economies increasingly valuing diversity and sustainability, Botswana is stepping into the spotlight as a pioneer in inclusive economic development. At the heart of this bold move is the inaugural Economic Inclusion Forum, spearheaded by Banana Club, a Botswana-based nonprofit redefining the relationship between culture and capital.
Scheduled for October 24, 2025, in Gaborone, the Forum will convene business leaders, policymakers, creatives, and civil society to explore how inclusion—particularly of historically marginalized groups—can drive innovation, investment, and long-term resilience across Africa.
Anchored in the theme “Harnessing the Power of the Pink Economy,” the event is more than a conference—it is a signal. It underscores Botswana’s readiness to lead on issues once considered peripheral to economic growth but now seen as fundamental to shaping the future.
Founder and Creative Director of Banana Club, Tanlume Enyatseng, describes the Forum as a moment to “redraw the map” of African development. “Economic exclusion is not just unjust; it’s unproductive,” he said. “We are flipping the script. Inclusion is not charity—it’s strategy. And Botswana is the ideal place to start this regional dialogue.”

The Forum will focus on unlocking the economic potential of the Pink Economy, estimated globally at $4.3 trillion. It will spotlight entrepreneurs and enterprises led by LGBTQIA+ individuals, women, youth, and creatives—sectors often ignored in traditional economic strategies but rich with opportunity and innovation.
Participants will engage in expert panels, keynote presentations, and live podcast recordings covering a spectrum of topics including inclusive business models, cultural capital, and legal frameworks that support equitable development. The Forum also draws a connection between the arts and economics, highlighting the role of creative industries in shaping inclusive futures.
The two-day event will culminate in the Banana Club Block Party™ on October 25—a celebration of underground music, youth culture, and the vibrant energy that Banana Club believes is central to any serious economic vision for the region.
“This is not a rights conference,” Enyatseng emphasized. “It’s a data-driven, market-forward gathering to reimagine our economies. As Vice President Ndaba Gaolathe recently said, ‘Our borders must be bridges, and our institutions, instruments of the future.’ We are answering that call.”
As ESG principles and stakeholder capitalism become standard across the global private sector, Botswana’s positioning through this Forum reflects a broader strategic shift. Rather than following trends, the country is asserting itself as a regional innovator, leveraging inclusion not just as a moral imperative but as a competitive advantage.
Local and international stakeholders are being invited to join what promises to be a catalytic moment for Southern Africa—a moment where inclusion is not an afterthought but the foundation for the continent’s next economic chapter.