….After five years of economic hardship under the Malawi Congress Party (MCP) from 2020 to 2025, the new Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) government faces the monumental task of repairing a damaged economy, restoring confidence, and setting Malawi back on a path to sustainable growth.
How long does it take to fix an economy that has been damaged for five years?
This question now defines the enormous challenge facing the new Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) government as it takes over from the Malawi Congress Party (MCP), whose administration between 2020 and 2025 left behind a trail of economic distress, fiscal indiscipline, and widespread frustration among citizens.
The period from 2020 to 2025 was marked by one of the most difficult economic phases in Malawi’s democratic history.
During this time, inflation soared, the Malawi Kwacha depreciated sharply, public debt ballooned, and the cost of living became unbearable for most households.
Indeed, official figures show that inflation in 2024 averaged around 32.2 percent, up from more moderate levels in earlier years.

By contrast, in 2019 inflation was significantly lower, hovering in low double digits or below in some months, which meant that consumer price stability was more attainable and household planning less volatile.
Foreign exchange reserves also became dangerously low.
In 2024, Malawi’s foreign exchange reserves covered just about 2.1 months of import needs, far below the ideal threshold of three to six months that many economists demarcate as sufficient cover.
Public debt in 2024 stood at about 84.5 percent of GDP, slightly down from over 90 percent in 2023, but still extremely high and unsustainable in the absence of revenue growth and strict fiscal discipline.
The GDP growth rate also tells a worrying story.
Between 2011-2019, Malawi averaged around 4.1 percent real GDP growth annually, but since 2020 growth has dropped sharply. In 2024, the growth rate was around 1.8 percent, according to the World Bank’s Malawi Economic Monitor.
Population growth remained at about 2.6 percent per year over that same period, which meant that incomes per capita stagnated or even fell, as economic growth did not keep up with demographic expansion.
By 2025, reserve levels had improved only marginally, but the import cover remained fragile, and households continued to feel the effects of currency weakness through high import costs, especially for fuel, medicines, and agricultural inputs.
Unemployment among youth soared, while small and medium enterprises struggled to survive amidst reduced consumer demand, high cost of credit, and challenges in accessing foreign exchange.
Corruption scandals and policy inconsistencies eroded both domestic and international confidence in Malawi’s economic management.
By 2025, Malawi’s economy was in distress — public institutions weakened, fiscal deficits widened, and donor confidence dwindled due to poor governance and lack of fiscal transparency.
Now, with the DPP returning to power, Malawians are once again looking to Professor Arthur Peter Mutharika and his new administration for answers, stability, and hope.
The first challenge for the DPP government is stabilization — to stop the economic bleeding and restore macroeconomic balance.
This means tightening government spending, reducing unnecessary borrowing, and ensuring that public resources are allocated to productive sectors rather than consumption.
Economic experts often suggest that genuine recovery from a prolonged economic downturn takes five to ten years, depending on the scale of damage and consistency of reforms.
In Malawi’s case, recovery will depend on whether the DPP can implement credible fiscal reforms, rebuild investor confidence, and foster a culture of accountability within public institutions.
Short-term stabilization policies may involve painful adjustments such as reducing subsidies, rationalizing public sector employment, and reforming state-owned enterprises that have long drained public resources.
While such measures may initially be unpopular, they are essential to restore fiscal discipline and lay the foundation for long-term growth.
The second phase of recovery must focus on structural transformation — building a resilient economy that is not overly dependent on imports or donor aid.
This will require modernizing agriculture, improving productivity, and investing in value addition to make Malawi’s exports more competitive.
The government must also prioritize industrialization and energy security, as these are key to creating jobs and supporting private sector-led growth.
Infrastructure development — especially in transport, energy, and digital connectivity — should form the backbone of the DPP’s economic recovery plan.
Equally important is restoring public trust.
Citizens must see transparency in how government resources are used and how decisions are made.
Without trust, even the best economic policies can fail to achieve the desired outcomes.
The DPP must therefore strengthen anti-corruption institutions, promote meritocracy in public appointments, and ensure that economic opportunities are fairly distributed across the country.
Another critical area for reform is monetary policy.
The Reserve Bank of Malawi must maintain independence and focus on stabilizing the currency while ensuring that credit flows to productive sectors such as agriculture, mining, and manufacturing.
Exchange rate management will be central to recovery, as Malawi’s dependence on imports makes it vulnerable to external shocks.
The DPP government will also need to rebuild relationships with development partners, the IMF, and the World Bank to regain access to concessional financing and technical support.
However, the ultimate solution lies in domestic productivity — increasing Malawi’s capacity to produce, export, and generate jobs for its population.
Public-private partnerships can play a transformative role in sectors such as renewable energy, agro-processing, and infrastructure, where long-term investments can yield sustainable returns.
Social protection will remain important during this transition.
As reforms take effect, vulnerable populations must be cushioned via targeted programs in education, healthcare, and food security to prevent social instability.
Expectations vs. Reality now becomes central to understanding what Malawians needed and what they must still demand.
When Malawians voted for change in 2025, their expectations were clear and deeply rooted in the hardships of the previous five years.
The majority of voters wanted economic relief, job creation, stable prices, and a reduction in corruption.
For millions, the change of government represented not just a political transition, but a lifeline — a belief that a new administration under Professor Arthur Peter Mutharika and Dr. Jane Ansah could deliver where the previous government had failed.
The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) campaigned on promises to fix the economy, bring back investor confidence, and restore basic affordability in food, fuel, and transport.
Ordinary Malawians, particularly those in urban centers and farming districts, expect quick solutions to the cost of living crisis that saw the price of maize rise from modest levels in pre-2020 years to levels that in some parts now require double or more as much Kwacha.
Public service workers — from teachers to nurses — hope for stable salaries and timely payments, after years of arrears and shrinking purchasing power due to inflation.
The private sector anticipates an improved business environment, with reliable electricity, access to foreign exchange, and fewer bureaucratic bottlenecks.
Young people, who make up over 60 percent of the population, demand opportunity — through skills training, entrepreneurship, and access to credit.
However, the economic reality facing the new DPP government is sobering.
According to the IMF Executive Board’s Article IV Consultation with Malawi (July 2025), economic activity in 2024 was hindered by lower-than-expected agricultural output and critical foreign exchange shortages, resulting in a decline of real GDP growth to 1.8 percent, down from around 5.4 percent in 2019.
Also in 2024, the fiscal deficit stood at 10.1 percent of GDP, due to lower revenues, election-related spending, and an escalating interest payment burden.
Poverty rates rose above 70 percent of the population, with many households falling deeper into food insecurity and struggling to meet basic needs.
The new government thus inherits a situation where the cost of recovery is high, both financially and socially.
To see real improvements — in inflation, in foreign exchange stability, in job creation — Malawians should reasonably expect some visible changes within 18 to 24 months, though many of these will be modest.
Complete restoration of confidence, stable investment, and a return to growth rates of 4-5 percent (as seen before 2020) may take three to five years of consistent, disciplined policy, strong governance, and external support.
Lessons from neighbouring and regional economies can offer guidance.
Consider Botswana, which in 2024 endured a contraction of 3.3 percent, largely due to weak diamond markets and external headwinds, but is projected to rebound with 3-4 percent growth in 2025 as mineral revenues recover and non-mining sectors improve.
Botswana’s strategy includes reducing its fiscal deficit from around 6.75 percent of GDP in one year to about 3.6 percent in the next; diversifying exports; and stimulating growth outside the mining sector to buffer against fluctuations in global demand.
Kenya provides another example: after the global recession of 2008-2009 and internal political shocks, Kenya implemented stimulus programs, infrastructure spending, and reforms in fiscal management. Over time, these contributed to restoring growth to above 5 percent annually. While Kenya’s challenges differ from Malawi’s, its experience shows that political will, investment in infrastructure, and macro-economic stability are key to recovery.
Similarly, Rwanda transformed its post-1994 economy by political stability, strong governance, investment in human capital, and prioritizing export sectors — tourism, coffee, tea, technology — which allowed it to recover faster than many peers.
These comparative cases suggest that Malawi can shorten its recovery timeframe if the DPP government prioritizes discipline, transparency, and strategic investment.
In Malawi, there are already signs that the new administration is making correct appointments to anchor fiscal policy. The appointment of an experienced economist, Joseph Mwanamvekha, as Finance Minister, is one signal that technical competence is being considered seriously.
Tobacco export revenues also offer a point of optimism: despite drought, tobacco revenue rose by about 40 percent in the April–August season of 2024 compared to the previous year, showing resilience in one of Malawi’s main export commodities.
However, the challenge remains in converting such individual wins into broad-based stability and growth for all sectors of the economy.
Economic reforms must be matched with social protections to prevent widespread hardship, especially in rural and informal sectors heavily impacted by inflation and currency instability.
Furthermore, external shocks — droughts, climate change, food price fluctuations, and aid dependency — remain real risks that could derail recovery unless mitigated by planning and investment in resilience.
The DPP government must also avoid repeating mistakes of past administrations: shifting policy directions too often, relying on unsustainable debt, and underestimating the political cost of reforms.
If DPP succeeds in maintaining stable macroeconomic policies, diversifying sources of growth, controlling inflation, and restoring trust, then Malawi could by 2029-2030 approach economic indicators similar to those of 2019 — growth around 4-5 percent, moderate inflation, improved foreign exchange reserves, reduced fiscal deficits, and increasing investment.
Yet citizens must remain engaged: holding leaders accountable, insisting on transparency, and demanding that promises translate into concrete development in health, education, roads, and jobs.
Fixing an economy that has been damaged for five years isn’t easy — but it is possible.
It demands vision, patience, public involvement, and leadership anchored in integrity.
The next few years are a defining moment for Malawi: if the DPP rises to the challenge, the country’s story may shift from decline to recovery, from fear to confidence, and from promise unfulfilled to progress realized.
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