By Kevin D. Williamson
Wednesday, October 01, 2025
Botswana has a lot going for it, including a stable
history of relatively ethical and responsible government sustained by a
fast-growing economy and a GDP per capita that puts it a world ahead of
neighbors such as Zimbabwe and Namibia, an economy that is experiencing
much-needed diversification but one in which diamond mining and diamond cartels
still play an outsized role. There was a peaceful transfer of power after the
Botswana Democratic Party was turned out by voters in the 2024 elections after
58 years in power. Rooted in the country’s national liberation movement, it was
the only party that ever had held power in the country and had been the
longest-ruling party in the democratic world.
Botswana is doing reasonably well. But if it is not doing
as well as it could be, it is because it is not making the most of the
resources with which it is blessed. I don’t mean diamonds.
I mean the people.
Continuing as a diamond-based economy becomes less
tenable by the day. Lab-grown diamonds have led to a collapse in demand for
mined stones, which has been nothing short of disastrous for Botswana, where
diamonds account for 25 percent of GDP and 80 percent of exports, as well as
about half of government revenue. In late September, the state-run diamond
trader put
1 million carats of diamonds up for sale in an auction that failed when no bidder would pay the reserve price.
Once noted for its prudent governance, the country has
seen rising public debt (projected to double to more than 40
percent of GDP in the coming year, which would be relatively low for the
United States but is high for such a country as Botswana) and recently suffered
a credit downgrade of
its sovereign obligations.
The economic vectors do not look promising: The price of
natural diamonds has declined by 26 percent since 2022, which surely is a
lagging indicator chasing the fact that the price
of synthetic diamonds has declined by 74 percent since 2020. But if the
price of aesthetically pleasing hunks of carbon tells a sad story for diamond
diggers, there are three other numbers that do a lot more work in demonstrating
what ails Botswana and what needs to be done to encourage the emergence of
broader and more durable prosperity in the country: 23, 70, and 2.
The first number indicates Botswana’s unemployment rate,
which recently has hovered around 23
percent—and the
figure is worse for young people. That is a great deal of human capital on
the sidelines. But the next two numbers point to an even less tractable
problem: About 70 percent of the Botswanan workforce is employed in
agriculture, collectively producing about 2 percent of GDP—which is to say, the
great majority of the country’s workers are employed in an industry that
produces almost no value. If you want to create real economic value in
agriculture, then you’re talking about those big “factory farms” and commodity
crops that so bother the sentimentalists. Disorganized, small-scale farming
creates a lot of jobs but not much output in return for all that hard work.
Sometimes, a job is not the solution to an economic
problem. Sometimes, the job is the problem. But that can be hard for a certain
kind of person to see. Those people instead worry what is to be done with all
those Botswanan farmers if the farm jobs go away—not that they dream of their own
children laboring in sorghum fields, of course.
I hesitate to go so far as to insist that Paul Ehrlich is
a racist, but I will note that his infamous 1968 book, The Population Bomb—a
would-be prophecy that has proved wrong on every single major point but remains
shockingly influential—was inspired by the crowds of brown people the author
observed in Delhi and by what he believed to be the dysgenic fecundity of
Indian families, while the movement he midwifed into existence has long
regarded population growth in Africa and Asia with especial horror. Strange that nobody complains there are
too many Norwegians in the world or an excess of Swedes who will, as the
Malthusian logic insists, eventually deplete the world’s supply of herring
before it can be pickled.
With the economically advanced nations desperately trying
to work out a viable solution to the threat of demographic collapse that hangs
over the rich world, too many of us—on both sides of the political aisle—cling
to an economic superstition based on a version of Ehrlich’s error: that human
beings are a liability rather than an asset, and that there are too many
workers in the world and not enough jobs to go around, that people are simply
mouths to be fed and that a job—any job—is the way to feed them.
But creating jobs is no problem, as Botswana’s farms
demonstrate so ably: All that is needed is a mode of production that is
sufficiently inefficient. We could create 10 million new jobs in the United
States tomorrow if we would simply abandon our high-tech farming equipment and
go back to hand tools—and then create 100 million new jobs the day after that
if we traded
in our shovels for spoons. We’d probably starve to death in great numbers,
but there would be no unemployment.
It is dead simple to create jobs.
World War II created millions and millions of jobs—jobs
killing people, jobs destroying the physical apparatus of human civilization,
jobs building advanced instruments for the industrial-scale killing of people
and the worldwide destruction of economic assets (and cultural treasures and
churches and homes and hospitals and nurseries) but the world was no richer for
all that extra employment. Those who think World War II ended the Great
Depression in the United States should probably ask themselves why, if that was
the case, rationing was necessary in those years, or ask themselves why
household consumption, including spending on basic goods and services,
continued to decline in the war years in spite of the supposed recovery. War
may be a necessary evil, but it is no less an evil for being necessary, and
people do not improve their standards of living by massacring one another and
destroying cities.
This is a fact that was well-understood by no less a
soldier than Dwight Eisenhower:
Every gun that is made, every
warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft
from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed.
This world in arms is not
spending money alone.
It is spending the sweat of its
laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hopes of its children.
The cost of one modern heavy
bomber is this: a modern brick school in more than 30 cities.
It is two electric power plants,
each serving a town of 60,000 population. It is two fine, fully equipped
hospitals.
It is some fifty miles of
concrete pavement.
We pay for a single fighter plane
with a half million bushels of wheat.
We pay for a single destroyer
with new homes that could have housed more than 8,000 people.
That is dramatic stuff. But in cold-eyed terms, what
Eisenhower is talking about here is the repurposing of capital from
life-enhancing projects to life-destroying projects, which is to say, in less
exciting terms, from productive uses to non-productive uses. And while there
may be less moral urgency in the case, keeping millions upon millions of
workers (in Botswana or anywhere else) employed in nonproductive work—or in
marginally productive work—has about the same economic effect as drafting them
all into the army and marching them from place to place to no end, or, to
invoke the economists’ cliché, having them dig holes and then fill them up all
day. That isn’t war, exactly—but it is a war on prosperity.
Consider a point for comparison: There was a brief
recession in the United States in 1980, with a total economic contraction of
2.2 percent of GDP—a larger dip for U.S. GDP than the complete elimination of
agriculture would represent for the GDP of Botswana today. That is not much
output in return for the time and effort of the great majority of a country’s
workers. Nobody enjoyed the 1980 recession, but the lost economic production
was hardly catastrophic. It surely is the case that 2 percent of GDP isn’t nothing,
but it isn’t what you want 7 out of 10 workers keeping busy with.
People who romanticize a life of living in traditional
communities while following ancient folkways and eating locally grown produce
ought to move to rural Botswana for a year or two and see how they really like
it. Botswanans in the villages do not seem to like it very much: Like much of
the rest of Africa—and like the United States not that long ago—Botswana has
seen high levels of rural-to-urban migration for many years, a trend that is
unlikely to be reversed. There are few if any truly universal observations, but
this one gets close: Given a choice between low-level agricultural life and almost
anything else, people will choose almost anything else, a fact that
has been demonstrated time and again by people ranging from English serfs in
the 14th century to African Americans in the early 20th century
to Botswanan farmers today.
And it is not as though the workers of Botswana are
simply unable to do anything other than engage in agricultural activity limited
to something somewhere between subsistence farming and modest commercial
production—the country’s factories already produce (and export) some industrial
goods, such as insulated wiring, along with clothing and other similar consumer
goods, while food processing and ore refining are going concerns. The
government would very much like to encourage more investment and development of
domestic industrial capacity, a project that it has tried to execute with
methods that are at times clumsy—e.g., over the summer the president announced
a ban on the export of raw minerals (diamonds, copper, etc.) and a requirement
that these be processed domestically before export. The method probably is the
wrong one, but the goal of climbing up the value chain is one worth aiming at.
For millions of people and their countries, the first
step toward prosperity is a step off the farm. Most modern farming is a
capital-intensive, high-tech endeavor with relatively modest labor
requirements. Low-capital, labor-intensive farming is generally unproductive,
which is why there is so little of it where people have other choices. Happily,
there is much need for workers everywhere else: Human
action is inherently valuable, and there is always a
market demand for it.
Paul Ehrlich’s great antagonist was Julian Simon, the
economist who
won that famous bet with Ehrlich and who wrote a book
that answered Ehrlich’s population pessimism and then some, titled The
Ultimate Resource. Simon’s view—the people-are-assets view—is based on
an intelligent and
generous understanding of human dignity, one that is by necessity
universal. Botswana has a good deal of human capital at its disposal, but that
capital needs development, investment, and opportunity, if only because there
is a world of difference between an economy in which 70 percent of the workers
produce 2 percent of the value and one in which 70 percent of the workers
produce 70 percent of the value–or more.
To put it in more concrete terms: Leaving all those
workers on the farm is like leaving diamonds in the mine.
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