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Botswana in the Mind of Ghana
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
The August 17 meeting between Ghana’s President John
Atta Mills and Botswana’s Ian Khama goes between the
normal symbolic bilateral sweet talks. In contemporary
African thinking, the core issue between Ghana and
Botswana is how their respective democracies are
harbingers of progress for the entire African democratic
and development growth.
The Botswana-Ghana meeting also comes at a time when
development economists are changing their focus away
from cross-country empirical studies towards case
studies and “analytic narratives.” “Instead of trying to
explain all of sub-Saharan Africa’s problems in one
grand sweep, economists are engaging in more focused
studies of particular nations. Their hope is that by
clearly understanding the particulars, broader
conclusions can be drawn,” explains Scott A. Beaulier,
an economist at Troy University, USA.
The two countries democracies are trendsetters in Africa
but Botswana is the better of the two. While Ghana, a
coastal nation, is loud-mouthed, Botswana, landlocked,
is quiet and much more levelheaded. Botswana is a top
African example of how democracy, of the African
extraction, can be used to solve most of Africa’s
complicated development challenges.
Botswana’s development indicators top Sub-Sahara African
countries. This is despite the fact that 84 percent of
Botswana’s land mass is largely the uninhabitable
Kalahari Desert and 80 percent of Botswana’s people live
along the fertile eastern stripe of the state. Like
Israel, the future is how Botswana transforms its
inhabitable Kalahari Desert into habitable land for
greater development.
Since independence in 1966 from Britain, Botswana,
unlike Ghana which gain independence from Britain in
1957, has consistently held unfettered multi-party
democratic elections, Ghana hasn’t, maked by military
coups and executions. Like Ghana’s Kwame Nkrumah,
Botswana was blessed with a fine founding President, Sir
Seretse Khama, devoid of Nkrumah’s egomaniac tendencies.
But unlike Ghana where Nkrumah later became a dictator
and Ghana over the years expereinced some bad
leaderships, Botswana is blessed with three decent
leaders who succedded Seretse, the present one being
Ian, the son of Seretse.
Unlike Ghana, Botswana, from 1966, driven by immense
wisdom, has been able to integrate its traditional
institions into its British colonial heritage in its
development process. Seretse’s wife was a British woman,
making Ian, like ex-Ghana President Jerry Rawlings,
half-cast.. This makes Botswana indigenous institutions
and values central part of its democracy, with its
indigenous institutions as key accountability watcher.
For instance, despite his immense political power, the
traditional chief is regarded as an equal to Botswana
people.
As Newsweek pointed out in 1990 in a piece entitled
“Longing for Liberty,” “Botswana built a working
democracy on an aboriginal tradition of local gatherings
called kgotlas that resemble New England town meetings.”
That explains not only Botswana’s democratic evolution
but its dececentralization exercises that flow from its
traditional values.
Botswana has an abundance of diamonds and successive
governments have brilliantly husbanded it wisely for
proper development of Botswanans. Ghana was formerly the
world’s number one cocoa producer (it is now in number
two), long-running political instabilities affected its
development. Botswana doesn’t have such problems and
coupled with its good governance, this has made Botswana
Sub-Sahara Africa’s best developed and best run country.
In the UN Human Development Index, Botswana ranks 98th
and Ghana 130th out of 169 countries ranked in 2010.
In either Ghana or Botswana, world slumps in cocoa or
diamonds, respectively, has affected Gross Domestic
Product over the years. In Botswana, the average income
has tripled in real terms in two decades, putting
Botswana on a par with Mexico. While average income of a
Ghanaian is 1.60 Ghanaian cedis (€0.74) a day, in
Botswana it is 3.8 Botswana pula (€1.94) an hour for
most full-time labor in the private sector.
At the same time as Ghana’s population is over 24
million and heavily heterogeneous and Botswana’s is 2
million and is almost homogenous, at issue aren’t size
but the quality of governance. Size or no size, Botswana
virtually escaped what most African countries have to
confront – how to contain a far headier concoction of
disparaging ethnic groups within boundaries
unrealistically drawn by ignorant colonial map-makers.
Ethnically, Botswana’s foremost test is how to deal with
its anti-modern Bushmen minority. Ghana has tribalism
problems, with some of its 56 ethnic groups as backward
as the anti-modern Bushmen.
Unlike Ghana’s highly competitive democracy, Botswana
leaders are yet to be challenged by a strong opposition;
a single party has ruled since independence in 1966.
That makes Botswana almost a one-party system. That is
one reason why it was Ghana, with only 19 years of
democratic practices, a recent African success story in
democratic development, that made analysts to argue for
US President Barack Obama to make his first visit to a
sub-Saharan African country. Ghana’s 2008 presidential
elections was neck-to-neck and the then governing
National Patriotic Party (NPP) maturely accepted defeat
by the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) at the
polls.
However, in Ghana and Botswana democracy is fairly well
established and independent institutions just evolving
(Botswana has fairly better developed democratic
institutions than Ghana). In Botswana, the Botswana
People Party has been in power for 44 years. The
opposition parties, especially the main Botswana
Movement for Democracy, are widely considered to have no
real chance of gaining power.
On the other hand, in Ghana, political power has been
changing hands between the ruling National Democratic
Congress and the main opposition National Patiotic
Party. But in Botswana voters happily vote the ruling
Botswana People’s Party into power for the past 44
years. Yet Botswanans do not feel disenfranchised.
Despite this, over the years, Botswana has proved as an
example of good governance in Africa. The lesson from
Botswana isn’t how often political power changes hands
but how political power is used for good governance and
development.
Despite some democratic hurdles in both Botswana and
Ghana, the African experiences points to democracy and
political leadership, more of the Botswanan variety,
where African values are deliberately and proportionally
mixed with the Western liberal ones, as the best
strategy to solve most of Africa’s development
challenges.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong,
Academic/Journalist, Canada, August 20, 2011
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