
Minister of Finance, Economic Planning and Decentralisation Joseph Mwanamvekha will on Friday present the 2026-27 national budget to Parliament. The budget comes months after the government launched the National Economic Recovery Plan (NERP), a blueprint aimed at stabilising the economy, restoring confidence and accelerating inclusive growth. Key assumptions anchoring the current budget are largely offbalance. Malawi’s projected gross domestic product (GDP) growth for 2025 was revised slightly downward from 2.8 percent in May to 2.7 percent in November 2025, reflecting fragility of the economy.
However, the government remains upbeat on the recovery trajectory, eyeing a GDP growth rate of 3.8 percent in 2026 and 4.9 percent in 2027.
The question analysts are asking is whether these targets are attainable, given persistent forex shortages, high borrowing costs and subdued private sector expansion. Headline inflation averaged 28.5 percent in 2025, and is projected to go further down to an average of 21 percent in 2026. The government affirmed commitment to bringing down the inflation to 21 percent this year, but this will largely depend on food supply stability, exchange rate management and fiscal discipline.
For households, where a family of six now requires over K1 million per month to meet basic needs, according to recent cost-ofliving estimates, the credibility of inflation assumptions will be central to judging the new budget. The 2025-26 total budget was revised upwards by K512.6 billion to K8.589 trillion from K8.077 trillion. The government projected to generate K3.078 trillion in revenue and grants during the second half of the financial year, comprising K2.420 trillion in domestic revenue and K657.5 billion in grants.
However, in the first two months of the second half, revenue collection was below K1 trillion combined, raising concerns about whether targets would be met without increased borrowing.
– Advertisement –
For instance, in October 2025, the government recorded revenues of K566.7 billion against expenditures of K577.5 billion, resulting in a relatively modest K10.8 billion deficit, a sharp improvement from September’s K327.4 billion deficit. In November 2025, however, revenue of K422.1 billion against expenditure of K498.5 billion widened the deficit to K76.4 billion.
Although these figures represent yearon-year improvement compared to 2024 levels, they highlight the fragility of revenue performance. If revenue projections fall short again in 2026-27, Treasury may face increased domestic borrowing pressure. Beyond recovery, attention is also on debt sustainability, as total public debt stood at K22.4 trillion as of September 2025, with domestic debt accounting for more than 55 percent of the total stock. Interest payment obligations alone are projected at K2.27 trillion in the 2025-26 fiscal year.
The Treasury has already begun efforts to reduce domestic borrowing, reflected in recent government securities auctions by the Reserve Bank of Malawi, where authorities have rejected most of the expensive long-term Treasury bill offers since January. Total rejections have since amounted to over K500 billion since January 2026 .
Still, rising expenditure commitments, including free secondary school education and K5 billion per constituency under the Constituency Development Fund, will add pressure to an already stretched fiscal framework. Economist Marvin Banda said interest payments, the wage bill and pensions continued to consume a significant portion of expenditure, limiting fiscal space for development spending.
– Advertisement – – Advertisement –
“What is critical is whether development expenditure reaches at least 30 percent, which is the minimum required gaining traction toward national aspirations,” Banda said. National Small and Medium Enterprises National Coordinator William Mwale has also urged the government to increase the operational budget for the Ministry of Industry and Trade to strengthen SME development monitoring across the country. “We would like to see the inclusion of SME industrial shelters in all regions. Most manufacturing SMEs operate from homes because industrial sites the government promised years ago are yet to materialise,” Mwale said. In his State of the Nation Address, President Peter Mutharika outlined austerity measures targeting public expenditure and benefits for senior officials, alongside measures to boost forex generation. Now the real test comes on Friday when Mwanamvekha outlines policies and allocations aimed at stabilising the economy while setting the foundation for recovery.
Read more on The Times Group Malawi

