An African Success Story: Botswana

Botswana has had the highest rate of per capita growth of any country in the world in the last 35 years. This occurred despite adverse initial conditions, including minimal investment during the colonial period and high inequality. Botswana achieved this rapid development by following orthodox economic policies. How Botswana sustained these policies is a puzzle because typically in Africa, ‘good economics’ has proved not to be politically feasible. In this Paper we suggest that good policies were chosen in Botswana because good institutions, which we refer to as institutions of private property, were in place. Why did institutions of private property arise in Botswana, but not other African nations? We conjecture that the following factors were important. First, Botswana possessed relatively inclusive pre-colonial institutions, placing constraints on political elites. Second, the effect of British colonialism on Botswana was minimal, and did not destroy these institutions. Third, following independence, maintaining and strengthening institutions of private property were in the economic interests of the elite. Fourth, Botswana is very rich in diamonds, which created enough rents that no group wanted to challenge the status quo at the expense of ‘rocking the boat’. Finally, we emphasize that this situation was reinforced by a number of critical decisions made by the post-independence leaders, particularly Presidents Khama and Masire.

[1]  G. Tabellini,et al.  Is Inequality Harmful for Growth , 1994 .

[2]  J. Widner Single Party States and Agricultural Policies: The Cases of Ivory Coast and Kenya , 1994 .

[3]  K. Good Interpreting the Exceptionality of Botswana , 1992, The Journal of Modern African Studies.

[4]  Robert J. Barro,et al.  Economic Growth in a Cross Section of Countries , 1991 .

[5]  I. Schapera Migrant labour and tribal life : a study of conditions in the Bechuanaland Protectorate , 1947 .

[6]  W. Mackenzie,et al.  Government and Politics in Tribal Societies , 1956 .

[7]  K. Good Corruption and Mismanagement in Botswana: a Best-Case Example? , 1994, The Journal of Modern African Studies.

[8]  R. Layton,et al.  Population and Political Systems in Tropical Africa. , 1971 .

[9]  I. Lewis A Modern History of the Somali: Nation and State in the Horn of Africa , 1955 .

[10]  Roland Bénabou,et al.  Unequal Societies: Income Distribution and the Social Contract , 2000 .

[11]  W. Easterly,et al.  Africa's Growth Tragedy: Policies and Ethnic Divisions , 1997 .

[12]  T. Killick Development economics in action: A study of economic policies in Ghana , 1978 .

[13]  J. H. Proctor The House of Chiefs and the Political Development of Botswana , 1968 .

[14]  E. H. Ashton Democracy and Indirect Rule , 1947, Africa.

[15]  J. Cobbe,et al.  Lesotho: Dilemmas Of Dependence In Southern Africa , 1985 .

[16]  J. Lonsdale States and Social Processes in Africa: A Historiographical Survey , 1981, African Studies Review.

[17]  D. Cohen The Botswana Political Elite: Evidence From the 1974 General Election , 1979 .

[18]  M. Lekorwe,et al.  Botswana, politics and society , 1998 .

[19]  I. Schapera,et al.  A Handbook of Tswana Law and Custom , 2019, Nature.

[20]  P. Kivisto,et al.  Ethnic Groups in Conflict. , 1986 .

[21]  A. Samatar,et al.  Botswana: The Road to Independence , 2001 .

[22]  P. Harries-Jones Freedom and labour : mobilization and political control on the Zambian copperbelt , 1977 .

[23]  I. Lewis,et al.  A Modern History of Somalia; Nation and State in the Horn of Africa , 1981 .

[24]  M. Owusu Uses and Abuses of Political Power: A Case Study of Continuity and Change in the Politics of Ghana , 1970 .

[25]  D. Apter Ghana in transition , 1973 .

[26]  T. Ranger The invention of tribalism in Zimbabwe , 1985 .

[27]  M. Fortes The Dynamics of Clanship Among the Tallensi , 2018 .

[28]  Simon Johnson,et al.  Reversal of Fortune: Geography and Institutions in the Making of the Modern World Income Distribution , 2001 .

[29]  M. Lofchie The Policy Factor: Agricultural Performance in Kenya and Tanzania , 1989 .

[30]  J. Holm Policy Choice and Development Performance in Botswana , 1991, African Studies Review.

[31]  Simon A. Roberts Order and Dispute: An Introduction to Legal Anthropology , 1981 .

[32]  J. Sachs,et al.  Geography, demography, and economic growth in Africa. , 1998, Brookings papers on economic activity.

[33]  R. Bates Markets and states in tropical Africa , 1981 .

[34]  A. Krueger Political Economy of Policy Reform in Developing Countries , 1993 .

[35]  Thomas Tlou The nature of Batswana States: Towards a theory of Batswana traditional Government the Batawana case , 1974 .

[36]  I. Lewis A Pastoral Democracy: A study of pastoralism and politics among the Northern Somali of the Horn of Africa , 1997 .

[37]  J. Widner The origins of agricultural policy in Ivory Coast 1960–86 , 1993 .

[38]  A. Kuper,et al.  Kalahari Village Politics: An African Democracy , 1972 .

[39]  W. V. Binsbergen Aspects of Democracy and Démocratisation in Zambia and Botswana: Exploring African Political Culture at the Grassroots , 1995 .

[40]  J. Sachs,et al.  Natural Resource Abundance and Economic Growth , 1995 .

[41]  P. Henze The Horn of Africa , 1991 .

[42]  D. Wylie A Little God: The Twilight of Patriarchy in a Southern African Chiefdom , 1990 .

[43]  R. Werbner Small Man Politics and the Rule of Law: Centre-Periphery Relations in East-Central Botswana , 1977, Journal of African Law.

[44]  N. Parsons A new history of southern Africa , 1983 .

[45]  D. Laitin,et al.  Somalia: Nation In Search Of A State , 1987 .

[46]  N. Chazan,et al.  Ghana: Coping With Uncertainty , 1986 .

[47]  G. Arrighi Labour supplies in historical perspective: a study of the proletarianization of the African peasantry in Rhodesia , 1970 .

[48]  The Myth of the Expanding Centre —Politics in the Ivory Coast , 1973 .

[49]  Catherine Boone State Building in the African Countryside: Structure and Politics at the Grassroots , 1998 .

[50]  M. Fortes,et al.  African Political Systems , 1941 .

[51]  Daron Acemoglu,et al.  Political Losers as a Barrier to Economic Development , 2000 .

[52]  A. Samatar An African Miracle: State and Class Leadership and Colonial Legacy in Botswana Development , 1999 .

[53]  J. Comaroff,et al.  Rules and Processes: The Cultural Logic of Dispute in an African Context , 1983 .

[54]  Gary Y. Okihiro,et al.  History of Botswana , 1984 .

[55]  J. P. Murray Kingdoms of the Savanna , 1966 .

[56]  Richard A. Voeltz,et al.  The Creation of Tribalism in Southern Africa , 1990 .

[57]  James A. Robinson,et al.  The Colonial Origins of Comparative Development: An Empirical Investigation , 2000 .

[58]  P. Sanders Survival in Two Worlds: Moshoeshoe of Lesotho 1786–1870 , 1977 .

[59]  V. Machingaidze The Roots of Rural Poverty in Central and Southern Africa , 1978 .

[60]  R. Rathbone,et al.  Contemporary West African States , 1990 .

[61]  K. Jefferis Botswana and diamond-dependent development , 1991 .

[62]  Louis A. Picard The politics of development in Botswana: A model for success? , 1987 .

[63]  I. Schapera The Ethnic Composition of Tswana Tribes , 1952 .