The purpose of this paper is to estimate the dynamic impact of trade openness on economic growth in Botswana using the ARDL bounds testing approach. The study employs four different proxies for trade openness, which include trade-based measures and a composite index. The trade-based measures capture the effects of total trade, exports, and imports while the composite index takes country size and geography into account. The use of four different indicators in this study enables a broader analysis of how different forms of trade openness affect economic growth. Evidence from the results points to the significance of total trade and exports in promoting economic growth in Botswana, but also the lack of growth impetus from imports. Specifically, the results reveal that when the ratio of total trade to GDP, the ratio of exports to GDP, and the trade openness index are used as proxies of trade openness, then trade openness has a significant, positive impact on economic growth in both the short run and the long run. However, when the ratio of imports to GDP is used as a proxy for openness, the study fails to find any significant impact of trade openness on economic growth in both the short run and the long run. Based on these findings, this study recommends that Botswana should pursue policies that boost the exports and total trade. However, there is ABOUT THE AUTHOR Malefa Rose Malefane is an emerging researcher at the University of South Africa, with a special interest in international trade and development.
PUBLIC INTEREST STATEMENTThis study explores the impact of trade openness on economic growth in Botswana, one of the fastest growing economies in sub-Saharan Africa. The study employs four indicators of trade openness, namely, the ratio of total trade to gross domestic product (GDP), the ratio of exports to GDP, the ratio of imports to GDP, and an index that accounts for growth effects of trade openness when country size and geography are taken into consideration. The study further includes a dummy variable to account for changes in trade policy from import substitution to export promotion. The study findings reveal that trade openness is significant in improving economic growth in Botswana, as confirmed by three of the four indicators of trade openness employed in analysis. These findings suggest that Botswana may use trade openness as one of its strategic measures for addressing the objective of sustainable economic growth.