Money – Banking · Editorial
By Moakanyi Magazine · Global Issue · June 2026
Botswana buys much of what it uses from beyond its borders – fuel, machinery, food – and pays in currencies it does not print. So when oil and trade shocks move exchange rates and raise import costs, as global forecasters have warned this year, the pressure arrives at the till regardless of how the domestic economy is performing. The World Bank cut its global growth outlook and warned of a sharper drop if conflict fallout spreads, a backdrop that keeps the Pula's import-cost exposure firmly in view.
The multicurrency mechanics
The Pula is managed against a basket, which softens but does not erase the swings in any single currency. When oil prices and trade flows shift, the cost of a US$-denominated fuel cargo or a rand-priced consignment of goods can change before a single domestic price does. For importers in Gaborone and Francistown, that is a margin risk they did not choose and cannot fully hedge away, and it lands on essentials rather than luxuries, where there is least room to absorb it.
The basket arrangement is designed to smooth exactly this kind of volatility, spreading exposure across the currencies that matter most to Botswana's trade. But smoothing is not eliminating, and a synchronised global shock can move several basket currencies in the same direction at once, narrowing the very protection the mechanism is meant to provide.
An economy that imports its essentials imports its volatility with them.
The practical response is unglamorous: tighter forward planning on fuel and input costs, realistic pricing that does not assume yesterday's exchange rate, and a watchful eye on the Bank of Botswana's basket signals. For a small open economy, currency risk is not a market to beat but a weather system to dress for, and the firms that plan for it ride out shocks that catch the unprepared flat-footed.
Sources: Reuters




