{ "Introduction": { "Background": { "text": "In the early 1800s, multiple political entities in what is now Botswana were destabilized or destroyed by a series of conflicts and population movements in southern Africa. By the end of this period, the Tswana ethnic group, who also live across the border in South Africa, had become the most prominent group in the area. In 1852, Tswana forces halted the expansion of white Afrikaner settlers who were seeking to expand their territory northwards into what is now Botswana. In 1885, Great Britain claimed territory that roughly corresponds with modern day Botswana as a protectorate called Bechuanaland. Upon independence in 1966, the British protectorate of Bechuanaland adopted the new name of Botswana, which means land of the Tswana. More than five decades of uninterrupted civilian leadership, progressive social policies, and significant capital investment have created an enduring democracy and upper-middle-income economy. The ruling Botswana Democratic Party has won every national election since independence; President Mokgweetsi Eric MASISI assumed the presidency in 2018 following the retirement of former President Ian KHAMA due to constitutional term limits. MASISI won his first election as president in 2019, and he is Botswana’s fifth president since independence. Mineral extraction, principally diamond mining, dominates economic activity, though tourism is a growing sector due to the country's conservation practices and extensive nature preserves. Botswana has one of the world's highest rates of HIV/AIDS infection but also one of Africa's most progressive and comprehensive programs for dealing with the disease.
" } }, "Geography": { "Location": { "text": "Southern Africa, north of South Africa" }, "Geographic coordinates": { "text": "22 00 S, 24 00 E" }, "Map references": { "text": "Africa" }, "Area": { "total": { "text": "581,730 sq km" }, "land": { "text": "566,730 sq km" }, "water": { "text": "15,000 sq km" } }, "Area - comparative": { "text": "slightly smaller than Texas; almost four times the size of Illinois" }, "Land boundaries": { "total": { "text": "4,347.15 km" }, "border countries": { "text": "Namibia 1,544 km; South Africa 1,969 km; Zambia 0.15 km; Zimbabwe 834 km" } }, "Coastline": { "text": "0 km (landlocked)" }, "Maritime claims": { "text": "none (landlocked)" }, "Climate": { "text": "semiarid; warm winters and hot summers" }, "Terrain": { "text": "predominantly flat to gently rolling tableland; Kalahari Desert in southwest" }, "Elevation": { "highest point": { "text": "Manyelanong Hill 1,495 m" }, "lowest point": { "text": "junction of the Limpopo and Shashe Rivers 513 m" }, "mean elevation": { "text": "1,013 m" } }, "Natural resources": { "text": "diamonds, copper, nickel, salt, soda ash, potash, coal, iron ore, silver" }, "Land use": { "agricultural land": { "text": "45.8% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: arable land": { "text": "arable land: 0.6% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: permanent crops": { "text": "permanent crops: 0% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: permanent pasture": { "text": "permanent pasture: 45.2% (2018 est.)" }, "forest": { "text": "19.8% (2018 est.)" }, "other": { "text": "34.4% (2018 est.)" } }, "Irrigated land": { "text": "25 sq km (2014)" }, "Major rivers (by length in km)": { "text": "
Zambezi (shared with Zambia [s]), Angola, Namibia, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique [m]) - 2,740 km; Limpopo (shared with South Africa [s], Zimbabwe, and Mozambique [m]) - 1,800 km; Okavango river mouth (shared with Angola [s], and Namibia) - 1,600 km
note – [s] after country name indicates river source; [m] after country name indicates river mouth
Botswana has experienced one of the most rapid declines in fertility in Sub-Saharan Africa. The total fertility rate fell from more than 5 children per woman in the mid 1980s to approximately 2.4 in 2013, and remains at that level in 2022. The fertility reduction has been attributed to a host of factors, including higher educational attainment among women, greater participation of women in the workforce, increased contraceptive use, later first births, and a strong national family planning program. Botswana was making significant progress in several health indicators, including life expectancy and infant and child mortality rates, until being devastated by the HIV/AIDs epidemic in the 1990s.
In 2021, Botswana had one of the highest HIV/AIDS prevalence rates in the world at close to 20%, however comprehensive and effective treatment programs have reduced HIV/AIDS-related deaths. The combination of declining fertility and increasing mortality rates because of HIV/AIDS is slowing the population aging process, with a narrowing of the youngest age groups and little expansion of the oldest age groups. Nevertheless, having the bulk of its population (about 60% as of 2022) of working age will only yield economic benefits if the labor force is healthy, educated, and productively employed.
Batswana have been working as contract miners in South Africa since the 19th century. Although Botswana’s economy improved shortly after independence in 1966 with the discovery of diamonds and other minerals, its lingering high poverty rate and lack of job opportunities continued to push workers to seek mining work in southern African countries. In the early 1970s, about a third of Botswana’s male labor force worked in South Africa (lesser numbers went to Namibia and Zimbabwe). Not until the 1980s and 1990s, when South African mining companies had reduced their recruitment of foreign workers and Botswana’s economic prospects had improved, were Batswana increasingly able to find job opportunities at home.
Most Batswana prefer life in their home country and choose cross-border migration on a temporary basis only for work, shopping, visiting family, or tourism. Since the 1970s, Botswana has pursued an open migration policy enabling it to recruit thousands of foreign workers to fill skilled labor shortages. In the late 1990s, Botswana’s prosperity and political stability attracted not only skilled workers but small numbers of refugees from neighboring Angola, Namibia, and Zimbabwe.
" }, "Age structure": { "0-14 years": { "text": "29.17% (male 355,951/female 349,283)" }, "15-64 years": { "text": "64.88% (male 745,327/female 823,267)" }, "65 years and over": { "text": "5.95% (2023 est.) (male 57,876/female 85,892)" } }, "Dependency ratios": { "total dependency ratio": { "text": "57.5" }, "youth dependency ratio": { "text": "51.8" }, "elderly dependency ratio": { "text": "5.7" }, "potential support ratio": { "text": "13.8 (2021 est.)" } }, "Median age": { "total": { "text": "25.7 years" }, "male": { "text": "24.5 years" }, "female": { "text": "26.7 years (2020 est.)" } }, "Population growth rate": { "text": "1.37% (2023 est.)" }, "Birth rate": { "text": "19.95 births/1,000 population (2023 est.)" }, "Death rate": { "text": "8.98 deaths/1,000 population (2023 est.)" }, "Net migration rate": { "text": "2.77 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2023 est.)" }, "Population distribution": { "text": "the population is primarily concentrated in the east with a focus in and around the captial of Gaborone, and the far central-eastern city of Francistown; population density remains low in other areas in the country, especially in the Kalahari to the west as shown in this population distribution map" }, "Urbanization": { "urban population": { "text": "72.9% of total population (2023)" }, "rate of urbanization": { "text": "2.47% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)" } }, "Major urban areas - population": { "text": "269,000 GABORONE (capital) (2018)" }, "Sex ratio": { "at birth": { "text": "1.03 male(s)/female" }, "0-14 years": { "text": "1.02 male(s)/female" }, "15-64 years": { "text": "0.91 male(s)/female" }, "65 years and over": { "text": "0.67 male(s)/female" }, "total population": { "text": "0.92 male(s)/female (2023 est.)" } }, "Maternal mortality ratio": { "text": "186 deaths/100,000 live births (2020 est.)" }, "Infant mortality rate": { "total": { "text": "24.41 deaths/1,000 live births" }, "male": { "text": "26.72 deaths/1,000 live births" }, "female": { "text": "22.04 deaths/1,000 live births (2023 est.)" } }, "Life expectancy at birth": { "total population": { "text": "66.04 years" }, "male": { "text": "63.98 years" }, "female": { "text": "68.16 years (2023 est.)" } }, "Total fertility rate": { "text": "2.37 children born/woman (2023 est.)" }, "Gross reproduction rate": { "text": "1.17 (2023 est.)" }, "Contraceptive prevalence rate": { "text": "67.4% (2017)" }, "Drinking water source": { "improved: urban": { "text": "urban: 98.1% of population" }, "improved: rural": { "text": "rural: 96.9% of population" }, "improved: total": { "text": "total: 99.4% of population" }, "unimproved: urban": { "text": "urban: 0.2% of population" }, "unimproved: rural": { "text": "rural: 3.1% of population" }, "unimproved: total": { "text": "total: 0.6% of population (2020 est.)" } }, "Current health expenditure": { "text": "6.2% of GDP (2020)" }, "Physicians density": { "text": "0.38 physicians/1,000 population (2018)" }, "Hospital bed density": { "text": "1.8 beds/1,000 population" }, "Sanitation facility access": { "improved: urban": { "text": "urban: 94.9% of population" }, "improved: rural": { "text": "rural: 63% of population" }, "improved: total": { "text": "total: 85.6% of population" }, "unimproved: urban": { "text": "urban: 5.1% of population" }, "unimproved: rural": { "text": "rural: 37% of population" }, "unimproved: total": { "text": "total: 14.4% of population (2020 est.)" } }, "Major infectious diseases": { "degree of risk": { "text": "high (2023)" }, "food or waterborne diseases": { "text": "bacterial diarrhea, hepatitis A, and typhoid fever" }, "vectorborne diseases": { "text": "malaria" }, "note": "note: on 22 March 2023, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued a Travel Alert for polio in Africa; Botswana is currently considered a high risk to travelers for circulating vaccine-derived polioviruses (cVDPV); vaccine-derived poliovirus (VDPV) is a strain of the weakened poliovirus that was initially included in oral polio vaccine (OPV) and that has changed over time and behaves more like the wild or naturally occurring virus; this means it can be spread more easily to people who are unvaccinated against polio and who come in contact with the stool or respiratory secretions, such as from a sneeze, of an “infected” person who received oral polio vaccine; the CDC recommends that before any international travel, anyone unvaccinated, incompletely vaccinated, or with an unknown polio vaccination status should complete the routine polio vaccine series; before travel to any high-risk destination, the CDC recommends that adults who previously completed the full, routine polio vaccine series receive a single, lifetime booster dose of polio vaccine" }, "Obesity - adult prevalence rate": { "text": "18.9% (2016)" }, "Alcohol consumption per capita": { "total": { "text": "5.98 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" }, "beer": { "text": "2.93 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" }, "wine": { "text": "0.46 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" }, "spirits": { "text": "0.96 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" }, "other alcohols": { "text": "1.64 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" } }, "Tobacco use": { "total": { "text": "19.4% (2020 est.)" }, "male": { "text": "30.4% (2020 est.)" }, "female": { "text": "8.3% (2020 est.)" } }, "Children under the age of 5 years underweight": { "text": "NA" }, "Currently married women (ages 15-49)": { "text": "45% (2023 est.)" }, "Education expenditures": { "text": "8.7% of GDP (2020 est.)" }, "Literacy": { "definition": { "text": "age 15 and over can read and write" }, "total population": { "text": "88.5%" }, "male": { "text": "88%" }, "female": { "text": "88.9% (2015)" } }, "School life expectancy (primary to tertiary education)": { "total": { "text": "12 years" }, "male": { "text": "12 years" }, "female": { "text": "12 years (2021)" } }, "Youth unemployment rate (ages 15-24)": { "total": { "text": "41.2%" }, "male": { "text": "39.5%" }, "female": { "text": "43.3% (2021 est.)" } } }, "Environment": { "Environment - current issues": { "text": "overgrazing; desertification; limited freshwater resources; air pollution" }, "Environment - international agreements": { "party to": { "text": "Biodiversity, Climate Change, Climate Change-Kyoto Protocol, Climate Change-Paris Agreement, Desertification, Endangered Species, Hazardous Wastes, Law of the Sea, Nuclear Test Ban, Ozone Layer Protection, Wetlands" }, "signed, but not ratified": { "text": "none of the selected agreements" } }, "Climate": { "text": "semiarid; warm winters and hot summers" }, "Land use": { "agricultural land": { "text": "45.8% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: arable land": { "text": "arable land: 0.6% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: permanent crops": { "text": "permanent crops: 0% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: permanent pasture": { "text": "permanent pasture: 45.2% (2018 est.)" }, "forest": { "text": "19.8% (2018 est.)" }, "other": { "text": "34.4% (2018 est.)" } }, "Urbanization": { "urban population": { "text": "72.9% of total population (2023)" }, "rate of urbanization": { "text": "2.47% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)" } }, "Revenue from forest resources": { "text": "0.23% of GDP (2018 est.)" }, "Revenue from coal": { "text": "0.45% of GDP (2018 est.)" }, "Air pollutants": { "particulate matter emissions": { "text": "21.24 micrograms per cubic meter (2016 est.)" }, "carbon dioxide emissions": { "text": "6.34 megatons (2016 est.)" }, "methane emissions": { "text": "5.73 megatons (2020 est.)" } }, "Waste and recycling": { "municipal solid waste generated annually": { "text": "210,854 tons (2010 est.)" }, "municipal solid waste recycled annually": { "text": "2,109 tons (2005 est.)" }, "percent of municipal solid waste recycled": { "text": "1% (2005 est.)" } }, "Major rivers (by length in km)": { "text": "Zambezi (shared with Zambia [s]), Angola, Namibia, Zimbabwe, and Mozambique [m]) - 2,740 km; Limpopo (shared with South Africa [s], Zimbabwe, and Mozambique [m]) - 1,800 km; Okavango river mouth (shared with Angola [s], and Namibia) - 1,600 km
note – [s] after country name indicates river source; [m] after country name indicates river mouth
none identified
" } } }