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THE 2025 STATE OF THE ECONOMY IN LESOTHO: JOBLESS GROWTH AND SILENT FAILURES

FAILURES

By Khotso Mahonko

Lesotho’s economy in 2025 presents a complex and layered story, one that features

encouraging fiscal numbers on the one hand, and deep structural cracks on the other. The

economy has grown with 2.5% of the GDP in 2024/2025 fiscal year. Yet, beneath this headline,

lies a narrow base for that growth, which is heavily dependent on public infrastructure projects,

particularly the ongoing construction at Polihali under the Lesotho Highlands Water Project

Phase II (LHWP-II). If you strip away the contribution of this single project, the rest of the

economy barely grows at 2.0%, revealing an economy whose progress remains fragile and

unevenly distributed.

The LHWP-II has emerged not only as a water infrastructure initiative but also as a much

needed stimulus engine. It has created over 8000 direct jobs. These gains have offered

temporary relief to many Basotho families. However, the sustainability of this growth is

questionable. Once the construction winds down, the question remains: what comes next to

absorb this labor and maintain the growth momentum?

Fiscal performance, on paper, is more encouraging than it has been in years. The government

recorded a fiscal surplus, thanks in large part to windfall revenues from the Southern African

Customs Union (SACU), which reached nearly 27% of GDP, and water royalties that now stand

at over 7.2% of GDP. Public debt has been reduced to 56.6%, and foreign reserves now cover

six months of imports. But these achievements mask a more concerning reality: SACU transfers

are highly volatile and non-guaranteed, while water royalties, though rising, are temporary. The

risk, therefore, is that these gains will fund consumption or administration rather than investment

in productive sectors.

Yet the larger story is about structural stagnation, and no area illustrates this more clearly than

foreign direct investment (FDI). Lesotho has not attracted any significant FDI in several years

now, a stark reversal from the early 2000s when the country was hailed as a model of

investment-driven industrial growth, especially in manufacturing. Today, investor confidence is

eroded by a combination of factors: a cumbersome regulatory environment, limited ease of

doing business, persistent political uncertainty, and inadequate infrastructure outside of

donor-supported megaprojects. But part of the blame must also be placed on the Lesotho

National Development Corporation (LNDC). Despite being the apex investment promotion

agency, LNDC has not demonstrated the urgency or strategic aggression required to attract

investors in a globally competitive landscape. It lacks a coherent investment promotion strategy,

has weak aftercare support for existing investors, and has not adapted to the evolving needs of

21st-century capital which seeks not just tax holidays, but the entire ecosystem readiness.

Compounding this stagnation is the gradual collapse of a once-reliable income source for many

families: remittances from Basotho working in South African mines. For decades, theseremittances served as the lifeblood of rural economies, supporting school fees, livestock

purchases, retail spending, and even construction. However, declining mine employment,

mechanization in South Africa’s mining industry, and tightening immigration policies have led to

a sharp fall in remittances. In the 1990s, more than 100,000 Basotho worked in South Africa’s

mines; today, that figure has dropped to under 35,000. As remittance flows shrink, so too does

local liquidity in Lesotho’s rural and peri-urban economies, resulting in weakened demand for

goods, growing rural poverty, and a further contraction of informal market activity.

Meanwhile, Lesotho’s education system continues to operate in a vacuum, producing thousands

of graduates every year into a job market that is already saturated and structurally misaligned.

Higher education institutions are flooding the market with degree holders in traditional fields

without regard to current absorption capacity or economic relevance. Despite the transformation

of the global economy, very little has changed in Lesotho’s curriculum structure, pedagogy, or

output expectations. The system still prioritizes rote learning and theory-heavy programs, rather

than equipping learners with the skills and mindsets needed in modern economies; namely

creators, problem-solvers, innovators, digital practitioners, and entrepreneurs. The result is a

mismatch: a surplus of graduates chasing nonexistent jobs, while the economy simultaneously

suffers from deficits in technical, digital, and innovation oriented capabilities.

On the ground, the average Mosotho continues to feel the weight of a jobs crisis that shows no

signs of abating. Official youth unemployment is pegged at around 39%, but this figure is

misleading. It is said that over 220,000 youth were excluded from labor force calculations in

recent assessments, which significantly understates the true scale of youth joblessness. If these

excluded youth are factored in, the real youth unemployment rate may exceed 60%. Among

adults, job losses have been concentrated in key sectors such as textiles and mining, the two

pillars that have historically driven formal employment.

The textile manufacturing sector, once the pride of Lesotho’s industrial development under

AGOA, has been shrinking since the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2023 alone, over 10,000 jobs

were lost, and by 2024 employment numbers had declined further to around 27,000. With the

return of U.S. President Donald Trump and the imposition of steep tariffs—reportedly as high as

50%, a further 12,000 jobs are at risk this year if the negotiations to talk the U.S to a lower

percentage fail. Factories could scale down, and in some cases, closing entirely, as exports

become uncompetitive.

In the mining sector, the situation is equally grim. Mothae and Liqhobong mines are currently not

operational. Letšeng, the flagship mine, is struggling with low diamond sales, partly due to the

rise of synthetic lab-grown diamonds, global price weakness, and foreign currency exchange

challenges. The mine is cutting 20% of its workforce, amounting to about 300 jobs. These

developments have meant that dividends from the mining sector are virtually non-existent or just

extremely low this year despite the government holding 30% equity in these operations. Other

state-linked enterprises like Lesotho Flour Mills have not declared dividends in years, while the

dividend status of Econet and other government-shareholding entities remains unclear.Foreign aid, which has historically been a critical support structure for Lesotho, is also under

strain. The closure of several U.S. funded initiatives, including USAID programs and the

Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) Compact, has not only slowed development work but

also resulted in job losses. Although official figures remain difficult to verify, it is estimated that

thousands of professionals and community-level workers were affected by the withdrawal or

suspension of these projects.

The broader economic landscape reveals deepening poverty and rising vulnerability. While

macro-level poverty indicators show slight improvement, the lived experiences of Basotho tell a

different story. According to Afrobarometer’s 2025 survey, 85% of citizens experienced cash

shortages, 61% went without food, and nearly half lacked access to clean water at some point

during the year. Inflation, particularly food inflation, continues to erode real incomes, especially

for the working poor and those in the informal economy who live hand to mouth, I cannot talk

about those without income at all, it must be a disaster.

Entrepreneurship, often touted as the solution to unemployment, struggles in this environment.

The domestic market is weak. With only an estimated 350,000 people having steady income out

of a potential 550,000 economically active population, local demand remains constrained. Most

micro-entrepreneurs are trading in saturated markets, with little growth capital, no access to

meaningful business development services, and limited state support. Entrepreneurship, in this

case, becomes a survival mechanism rather than a catalyst for wealth creation.

Agriculture remains an underperforming sector. While livestock showed some resilience, crop

production was again hit by climate-related challenges and market inefficiencies. Government

efforts toward improving inputs and irrigation remain fragmented. Lesotho still imports more than

90% of its food, even while thousands go hungry, a tragic contradiction in an agriculturally

endowed country.

Despite these sobering realities, not all is bleak. Tourism, often overlooked in previous national

strategies, is showing signs of promise. In 2024, nearly one million tourists visited Lesotho, a

figure that signals both recovery and opportunity if you ask me. The country’s unique mountain

landscapes, cultural heritage, and growing eco-tourism ventures present a chance to build a

more inclusive and locally-rooted economy. If developed carefully, tourism could emerge as a

top-three contributor to GDP in the coming years. However, this will require coordinated

investment in infrastructure, hospitality training, and marketing alongside measures to ensure

community participation and benefit-sharing.

The time for talk is over. What Lesotho now needs is practical delivery, inclusive policymaking,

and bold leadership. The choices made between now and 2027 will define whether the country

remains stuck in the loop of dependency or charts a new path toward sustainable,

people-centered growth

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