• BERA confiscates contaminated fuelMay 22, 2026
    Moves to clampdown non-complying fuel stations Some individuals sell fuel illegally in dangerous ways BERA upbeat on mandate review BAKANG TIRO editors@thepatriot.co.bw RelatedPosts BERA confiscates contaminated fuel Botswana’s Hemp Industry Needs More Than Farming Licenses to Succeed BSE hits… Read more: BERA confiscates contaminated fuel
  • Botswana’s Hemp Industry Needs More Than Farming Licenses to SucceedMay 21, 2026
    As Botswana explores the legalization and development of Industrial Hemp, there is an important lesson to learn from South Africa’s experience. Legalizing Hemp cultivation alone is not enough to build a successful industry. Without processing facilities and reliable buyers,… Read more: Botswana’s Hemp Industry Needs More Than Farming Licenses to Succeed
  • Prof Mbaiwa joins BCPMay 19, 2026
    UB academic was previously MASS-BNF member SOLOMON TJINYEKA editors@thepatriot.co.bw RelatedPosts Prof Mbaiwa joins BCP Undiversified mining sector haunts Botswana Governance failures bleed Air Botswana Support authors and subscribe to contentThis is premium stuff. Subscribe to read the entire article.Login… Read more: Prof Mbaiwa joins BCP
  • Undiversified mining sector haunts BotswanaMay 19, 2026
      Mining companies must diversify beyond core business- Economist Economic decline forecasted to persist for sometime BAKANG TIRO RelatedPosts Prof Mbaiwa joins BCP Undiversified mining sector haunts Botswana Governance failures bleed Air Botswana Support authors and subscribe to contentThis… Read more: Undiversified mining sector haunts Botswana
  • Governance failures bleed Air BotswanaMay 19, 2026
    Weak oversight, leadership instability and operational inefficiencies affect reliability Air Botswana Operating Without Board of Directors   GORATAONE KGOSIMORE RelatedPosts Prof Mbaiwa joins BCP Undiversified mining sector haunts Botswana Governance failures bleed Air Botswana Support authors and subscribe to… Read more: Governance failures bleed Air Botswana
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Analysis & Opinions
  • Vacancies & Tenders
  • Login
  • Register
Monday, May 25, 2026
The Patriot On Sunday
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Analysis & Opinions
  • Vacancies & Tenders
No Result
View All Result
Cart / $0.00

No products in the cart.

  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Analysis & Opinions
  • Vacancies & Tenders
No Result
View All Result
The Patriot On Sunday
No Result
View All Result

Remove tainted financial advisors – BoB Governor

patriot by patriot
January 18, 2021
in Business
0

There is need for increased individual participation for the Botswana financial sector to grow.

The Governor of the Bank of Botswana (BoB) Moses Pelaelo said this at the launch of the 2019 Monetary Policy Statement on Tuesday.   

RelatedPosts

BERA confiscates contaminated fuel

Botswana’s Hemp Industry Needs More Than Farming Licenses to Succeed

BSE hits P1 trillion

Pelaelo said individuals need to trust fund managers to bring them returns on investment and this can only be achieved if there is adherence to codes of conduct by the employees in the financial sector.

Giving a stern warning, the Governor said, employees who have been found to be dishonest and dealing in bad faith should not be circulated around companies within the sector but rather removed altogether.

“This will maintain the integrity of the sector,” he said.

Pelaelo also announced that the bank rate had been retained unchanged at 5 percent. The decision was made at the MPC meeting held on February 26, 2019.

According to him, the outlook for price stability remains positive with inflation forecast to remain within the Bank’s 3 – 6 percent objective range in the medium term.

The Governor also noted that inflation fell from 3.8 percent in November to 3.5 percent in December 2018.

“Subdued domestic demand pressures and the modest increase in foreign prices contribute to the positive inflation outlook in the medium term,” he said.

The outlook, he said, is subject to upside risks emanating from the potential rise in administered prices, in particular, domestic fuel prices and government levies and/or taxes, beyond current forecasts.

He said, however, that restrained growth in global economic activity, technological progress and productivity improvement present downside risks to the outlook.

Pelaelo also announced that Real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew by 5.1 percent in the 12 months to September 2018, compared to a lower expansion of 2.4 percent in the year to September 2017, influenced by recovery in mining output and continued improvement in non-mining sectors.

The first MPC statement of 2019 reports that mining output expanded by 4 percent in the year to September 2018, compared to a contraction of 12.4 percent in the corresponding period ending September 2017.

For the same period, non-mining GDP grew by 5.2 percent from 4.4 percent.

“GDP is projected to increase by 4.2 percent in 2019, lower than the estimate of 4.5 percent for 2018,” said the central bank, adding that the significant influences on domestic economic performance include conducive financing conditions as indicated by accommodative monetary policy as well as a sound financial environment that facilitates policy transmission, intermediation and risk mitigation.

The MPC anticipates that an increase in government spending, as well as implementation of initiatives such as the doing business reforms, should also be supportive of economic activity. “Overall, it is anticipated that the economy will operate close to, but below full capacity in the short to medium term, thus posing no upside risk to the inflation outlook,” the statement continues.

The next full update of the Bank’s outlook for the domestic economy and inflation will be published a week after the MPC meeting of April 24, 2019 in the Monetary Policy Report.

April 24th 2019 is the next date for the committee’s meeting.

Tags: BoB
Previous Post

Stan-Chart in third year of profit growth

Next Post

P1 billion credit line for Zim; not P6 billion

Related Posts

BERA confiscates contaminated fuel
Business

BERA confiscates contaminated fuel

May 22, 2026
Botswana’s Hemp Industry Needs More Than Farming Licenses to Succeed
Business

Botswana’s Hemp Industry Needs More Than Farming Licenses to Succeed

May 21, 2026
BSE hits P1 trillion
Business

BSE hits P1 trillion

May 18, 2026
BETP Success: Govt leans to Huawei
Business

BETP Success: Govt leans to Huawei

May 11, 2026
ECONOMY SINKING DEEPER BoB hikes bank rate to 5,5%
Business

ECONOMY SINKING DEEPER BoB hikes bank rate to 5,5%

May 5, 2026
Mining in deep contraction
Business

Mining in deep contraction

April 28, 2026
Next Post
P1 billion credit line for Zim; not P6 billion

P1 billion credit line for Zim; not P6 billion

Please login to join discussion
  • BERA confiscates contaminated fuelMay 22, 2026
    Moves to clampdown non-complying fuel stations Some individuals sell fuel illegally in dangerous ways BERA upbeat on mandate review BAKANG TIRO editors@thepatriot.co.bw RelatedPosts BERA confiscates contaminated fuel Botswana’s Hemp Industry Needs More Than Farming Licenses to Succeed BSE hits… Read more: BERA confiscates contaminated fuel
  • Botswana’s Hemp Industry Needs More Than Farming Licenses to SucceedMay 21, 2026
    As Botswana explores the legalization and development of Industrial Hemp, there is an important lesson to learn from South Africa’s experience. Legalizing Hemp cultivation alone is not enough to build a successful industry. Without processing facilities and reliable buyers,… Read more: Botswana’s Hemp Industry Needs More Than Farming Licenses to Succeed
  • Prof Mbaiwa joins BCPMay 19, 2026
    UB academic was previously MASS-BNF member SOLOMON TJINYEKA editors@thepatriot.co.bw RelatedPosts Prof Mbaiwa joins BCP Undiversified mining sector haunts Botswana Governance failures bleed Air Botswana Support authors and subscribe to contentThis is premium stuff. Subscribe to read the entire article.Login… Read more: Prof Mbaiwa joins BCP
  • Undiversified mining sector haunts BotswanaMay 19, 2026
      Mining companies must diversify beyond core business- Economist Economic decline forecasted to persist for sometime BAKANG TIRO RelatedPosts Prof Mbaiwa joins BCP Undiversified mining sector haunts Botswana Governance failures bleed Air Botswana Support authors and subscribe to contentThis… Read more: Undiversified mining sector haunts Botswana
  • Governance failures bleed Air BotswanaMay 19, 2026
    Weak oversight, leadership instability and operational inefficiencies affect reliability Air Botswana Operating Without Board of Directors   GORATAONE KGOSIMORE RelatedPosts Prof Mbaiwa joins BCP Undiversified mining sector haunts Botswana Governance failures bleed Air Botswana Support authors and subscribe to… Read more: Governance failures bleed Air Botswana
The Patriot On Sunday

© 2024 Copyright The Patriot On Sunday - Inspired by Search Mart.

Navigate Site

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact Us

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Cart
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Sport
  • Analysis & Opinions
  • Vacancies & Tenders

© 2024 Copyright The Patriot On Sunday - Inspired by Search Mart.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?