By Cydric Damala:
Malawi has lived through so many cycles of austerity that it now feels like part of our national calendar. Governments change, slogans brighten the air, manifestos promise a fresh dawn but, sooner or later, the issue of austerity finds its way back into our lives like a stubborn visitor who refuses to leave.
Every administration arrives with stern talk about rebuilding the economy, tightening discipline and restoring order, yet each one inevitably returns to the same painful formula of higher taxes, frozen recruitment, cancelled development activities and endless restrictions.
The cruel irony is that austerity never lands where the problems originate. It falls on ordinary Malawians—never on those who cause the crises that make austerity necessary in the first place.
It is not fiscal discipline pulling us back into sacrifice; it is broken integrity. The money goes missing long before the budget is implemented, and when the Treasury runs dry, citizens are told to tighten their belts while leaders loosen theirs.
This pattern is old. When Joyce Banda’s administration was rocked by Cashgate, the biggest financial scandal of the democratic era, billions of Kwacha were siphoned out of government accounts. Donors pulled out. Austerity-based solutions stepped in, yet even at the height of that crisis, travel continued, allowances flowed and senior officials survived comfortably.
Indeed, citizens paid for a scandal they did not commit. Austerity, once again, was only for the governed not the governors.
MutharikaUnder Peter Mutharika’s first administration, the script barely changed. He championed a zero-aid budget and promised strict fiscal control.
However, behind the speeches were inflated contracts at the Electricity Supply Corporation of Malawi, questionable procurement deals and networks of suppliers who thrived under weak oversight.
Malawians endured rising costs and shrinking public services while the politically connected enjoyed the benefits of the very waste austerity was meant to fix. The message was clear: austerity was theatre. Loud in policy documents but silent in the corridors of power.
Lazarus Chakwera entered office in 2020 with a promise to “clear the rubble”. For a moment, Malawians believed the cycle might finally end but corruption networks proved stronger than reform efforts.
Fuel vanished from pumps, forex dwindled and the economy spiralled again into restrictions— travel bans, hiring freezes, collapsing service delivery.
Confidence collapsed further when public officials broke their own rules. And corruption scandals, some of which implicating Cabinet ministers and senior officials, drained whatever moral authority the administration had left.
Once again, the issue of austerity measures arrived not through strategy, but through consequence.
Then came September 16, 2025, when Malawians participated in the Presidential, Parliamentary and Local Government Elections.
After defeating Chakwera, Peter Mutharika has returned to the presidency and inherited an economy said to be in deep distress. Shrunken reserves, colossal debt and weakened institutions.
To this, he has responded with the familiar declaration of reduced travel, strict procurement and “boardroom governance” instead of lakeshore extravagance.
Yet within weeks, the first major Cabinet gathering took place at a luxurious lakeshore resort. Lavish spending on accommodation, allowances and entertainment has already made a mockery of the very austerity measures the government has just announced.
The most recent reports about the Vice President’s private visit to United Kingdom is another shocking news.
VOTED—MalawiansThere is no symbolism more painful to Malawians than leaders retreating to comfort while citizens are ordered to sacrifice.
As if this is not hypocritical enough, Parliament has just added another heavy load onto citizens’ backs by approving new punitive taxes in the name of stabilising revenue. Pay As You Earn (Paye) has gone up. Value Added Tax (VAT) has been increased from 16.5 percent to 17.5 percent.
For families already struggling under relentless price hikes and stagnant wages, this is not reform, it is punishment.
And the worst part? These tax measures are designed to refill coffers that have been emptied by corruption, incompetence and decades of unchecked waste.
This is not economics. This is the cost of broken governance.
Malawi is not trapped in austerity because it is poor. It is trapped because too much of what it produces is stolen, mismanaged or squandered. Procurement cartels inflate contracts. Oversight institutions are weakened. High-profile corruption cases gather dust. Asset recovery moves at a glacial pace. By the time Parliament debates national budgets, much of the resources are already lost through dubious deals.
Imagine a Malawi where stolen billions of Kwacha were recovered, where procurement mafias were dismantled, where culprits faced swift justice and where leadership lived within the rules it sets.
In that Malawi, hospitals would not ration medicine. Schools would not run without teachers. Local councils would not park ambulances because they cannot afford fuel. Recruitment would not freeze. VAT hikes and elevated Paye would be unnecessary.
Austerity would be rare, not routine.
But Malawi continues to treat symptoms while ignoring the disease. Austerity slows the bleeding, but integrity is the only cure. Until leaders build systems where corruption faces real consequences, this country will keep circling the same drain: cuts, freezes, tax hikes and broken promises.
Citizens are likely to continue carrying the weight of failures they did not cause while those who are responsible for the problems walk free.
Malawi’s story can change, but change will not come from recycled speeches about discipline. It will not come from yet another austerity circular. It will come only when integrity becomes something leaders live, not something they merely pronounce.
Decades of austerity are not a fiscal failure; they are a moral one. Unless Malawi confronts that truth, austerity will remain the unwanted guest that leaders summon but never suffer and that citizens endure without choice.
