Africa-Press – Malawi. There comes a point in every struggling economy where leadership must stop, look inward, and confront an uncomfortable truth: when survival becomes the national condition, policy has failed the people.
Malawi is at that point.
This is no longer a conversation about macroeconomic stability, fiscal discipline, or revenue mobilisation. It is about the lived reality of millions of Malawians who wake up every day only to discover that their effort, their labour, and their sacrifice are no longer enough to secure even the most basic dignity.
The State is taxing a people who have nothing left to give.
What is unfolding before us is not just economic hardship—it is a systematic draining of already fragile incomes through a dense, relentless web of taxes and levies that touch every corner of daily life. Income is taxed before it is received. It is taxed again when it is transferred. It is taxed yet again when it is spent. From Pay As You Earn to VAT, from mobile money levies to bank charges, from electricity purchases to water bills—there is no escape, no breathing space, no margin left for survival, let alone progress.
This is not taxation. This is extraction.
And the consequences are now impossible to ignore.
Across the country, formally employed Malawians—the very group that should anchor economic stability—are sliding into what can only be described as working poverty. These are not people without jobs. These are teachers, lecturers, civil servants—citizens who have done everything society has asked of them. Yet their salaries are being hollowed out to the point where saving is impossible, planning is futile, and development is a distant illusion.
When a teacher cannot afford clothes, when a lecturer cannot sustain utility bills, when a salaried worker cannot save even a fraction of their income, the system is not under strain—it is broken.
Government must understand this clearly: an economy does not grow by suffocating its middle class. It collapses.
The middle class is not just another demographic; it is the engine of demand, the driver of small businesses, the bridge between formal and informal sectors. Crush its purchasing power, and you trigger a chain reaction—reduced consumption, struggling businesses, job losses, and deeper poverty. What begins as a revenue strategy quickly becomes an economic contraction.
This is exactly where Malawi is heading.
And yet, instead of easing the burden, the policy direction has doubled down on it. Taxes have increased. Levies have multiplied. Utility costs have surged. All of this is being justified in the language of reform, stability, and fiscal necessity.
But reform that impoverishes the majority is not reform—it is miscalculation.
Stability built on the suffering of citizens is not stability—it is suppression.
The most damning failure in this moment is not the existence of tough policies. It is the absence of cushioning. There is no meaningful protection for low- and middle-income earners. No serious recalibration of tax thresholds. No deliberate effort to shield households from the cumulative impact of rising costs.
Instead, Malawians are being asked—quietly but forcefully—to absorb everything.
That is not governance. That is abdication.
Let us be clear: no country can tax its way out of economic distress by targeting a population already pushed to the brink. When disposable income collapses, the tax base itself erodes. When businesses struggle, revenue declines. When poverty deepens, dependency increases. The current approach is not only harsh—it is economically self-defeating.
Government must pause.
Not tomorrow. Not after the next fiscal review. Now.
It must take a hard, honest relook at the entire structure of taxes and levies that are suffocating households. Pay As You Earn thresholds must be revised to reflect current realities. The proliferation of transaction-based levies must be urgently reconsidered. Utility pricing must be regulated with human sensitivity, not just economic logic. And above all, there must be a deliberate, visible effort to restore breathing space to ordinary Malawians.
Because right now, there is none.
What is at stake here is not just economic performance—it is social stability. A population that is overburdened, unheard, and economically cornered does not remain patient forever. History has shown this, again and again.
But even before we reach that point, there is a deeper moral question: what kind of State knowingly pushes its citizens further into poverty in the name of recovery?
Malawians are not asking for luxury. They are asking for fairness. For balance. For a system that recognises their limits and does not punish them for simply trying to live.
The phrase “choncho, bola moyo” has become a national shield—a way of softening the harshness of reality. But beneath it lies a quiet desperation that should alarm any serious leadership.
Because a nation that is merely surviving is a nation that is slowly breaking.
Government must listen. Government must act. And most importantly, government must stop pretending that the current path is sustainable.
It is not.
And the longer this continues, the deeper the damage will run.
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