Story
28 April 2026
From Global Turbulence to Local Reality: How Namibia Is Turning Risk into Resilience
Across the country, a farmer stands in his field, calculating whether he can afford fertilizer this season. A young entrepreneur quietly adjusts her prices, aware that each increase risks losing customers.These are not isolated moments. They are early signals of a deeper shift.As global economic uncertainty persists and its effects start being felt in Namibia, the Government started implementing actions to support households and businesses. It is within this context that the Government of the Republic of Namibia, in partnership with the United Nations and development partners, convened the Sustainable Development Dialogue Series (SDDS).Held on 28 April 2026 at the United Nations House in Windhoek, the SDDS brought together Government leaders, policymakers, development partners and experts to examine the implications of global shocks and identify integrated national responses aligned with Namibia’s national development priorities.More than a platform for discussion, the SDDS is a government-led mechanism for strengthening policy coherence and coordination, ensuring that responses to external shocks translate into concrete action under Namibia’s Sixth National Development Plan (NDP6) and the United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework (UNSDCF) 2025–2029.When Global Shocks Become PersonalNamibia’s vulnerability to global disruptions is structural. Its reliance on imported fuel, combined with high transport intensity, means that external shocks are rapidly transmitted into rising costs of food, transport and essential goods.As highlighted during the dialogue, these impacts are not evenly distributed. Low-income households, informal workers, women, youth and smallholder farmers are affected first and most deeply.“Rising costs are not only economic pressures, but social ones, increasing household stress, deepening food insecurity, and heightening risks such as gender-based violence,” noted Mr. Wilbard Nashandi from the Ministry of Gender Equality, Poverty Eradication and Social Welfare.For young Namibians entering the labour market, the implications are immediate. Prolonged cost pressures translate into hiring constraints, delayed entrepreneurship and fewer pathways from education into work. Without targeted intervention, global shocks risk reinforcing inequalities and limiting access to opportunity.This is where global turbulence becomes personal, and where policy must respond to lived realities.A System Under PressureNamibia enters this period with macroeconomic stability but limited fiscal buffers. Global pressures are driving up costs in essential sectors while fiscal space remains constrained.“While recovery is underway, it remains fragile. External shocks pose a tangible threat to growth, livelihoods and fiscal stability,” cautioned Mr. I-Ben Natangwe Nashandi, Executive Director of the National Planning Commission.The Government therefore faces a dual challenge: protecting households and livelihoods in the short term while sustaining investments in long-term transformation under NDP6 priorities.“A geopolitical issue quickly becomes a household reality in Namibia,” emphasized Ms. Eunice Ajambo, Economist and Development Coordination Officer.Even as fiscal space remains constrained, the Government has begun rolling out targeted short-term measures to cushion households and stabilize key sectors. These include the continued use of the National Energy Fund to smooth fuel price increases, protecting households and businesses from abrupt cost shocks. Shock-responsive social protection programmes are being strengthened to better reach low-income households, women, youth and informal workers, alongside expanded support to smallholder farmers facing rising fuel and fertilizer costs. Together, these interventions reflect a deliberate effort to stabilize livelihoods in the short term, while keeping Namibia’s longer-term transformation agenda under NDP6 on track From Dialogue to Coordinated ResponseWhat distinguishes the SDDS is its role in translating analysis into coordinated policy action.The dialogue reaffirmed Government leadership in setting priorities and advancing national responses, while highlighting the United Nations’ role in supporting integrated analysis, coordination and implementation across sectors and partners.“We must respond to today’s pressures without losing sight of Namibia’s long-term transformation. The choices we make now will determine whether we emerge more resilient,” said Ms Hopolang Phororo, United Nations Resident Coordinator.The discussions reflected strong alignment between NDP6, the UNSDCF 2025–2029 and the six SDG Transitions, ensuring that immediate response measures contribute to longer-term resilience, inclusive economic transformation and sustainable development outcomes.The United Nations supports this process through forward-looking analysis, integrated policy advice and coordinated partnerships that help align financing, implementation and delivery behind national priorities. Where Change Must HappenThe dialogue identified key sectors where integrated action is essential.Reducing dependence on imported fuel through renewable energy and green hydrogen remains central to strengthening economic resilience and advancing Namibia’s long-term economic transformation agenda under NDP6 and the UNSDCF.Improving logistics systems and trade corridors, particularly within the framework of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), can help lower costs, enhance competitiveness and strengthen regional integration.These shifts are also central to expanding employment pathways. Investments in energy, trade and agricultural value chains can expand opportunities for job creation, skills development and entrepreneurship, particularly for young people entering the labour market. These efforts directly support the SDG Transitions on Jobs and Social Protection, Sustainable Food Systems and Energy Access and Affordability.Economic pressures are also affecting access to essential services, including healthcare, placing additional strain on households and risking setbacks in human development.Contributions during Panel II, including from Dr. Richard Banda, WHO Representative reinforced that protecting health systems is a critical component of broader resilience efforts and essential for sustaining development gains.Across these sectors, the focus is clear: policy responses must move beyond analysis to implementation through reforms, investments and coordinated partnerships that address both immediate pressures and structural vulnerabilities. Coordination That DeliversA consistent message throughout the dialogue was that fragmented responses will not deliver sustainable results.“Global turbulence does not respect sector boundaries. Our response cannot be siloed,” emphasized Mrs. Ndiitah Nghipondoka-Robiati, Executive Director in the Ministry of International Relations and Trade.Effective response depends on integrated action across Government institutions, supported by aligned contributions from the United Nations, development partners, the private sector and civil society.The SDDS provides a structured mechanism to bring these actors together, ensuring that policy, financing and implementation are aligned toward common national objectives and Cooperation Framework priorities.From Dialogue to Delivery: Implementation PrioritiesThe dialogue established a clear pathway from risk analysis to coordinated action, guided by the six SDG Transitions as a roadmap for resilience and transformation.In the immediate term, priorities focus on stabilisation. These include strengthening shock-responsive social protection systems under the Jobs and Social Protection Transition, easing cost pressures through improved logistics and fuel management, and supporting farmers and small businesses to protect livelihoods and prevent further erosion of household resilience.In the medium term, efforts will focus on resilience. Priorities include strengthening trade corridors, improving supply chain coordination and aligning financing to support recovery while expanding economic opportunities, particularly for young people entering the labour market. These efforts reinforce the Food Systems, Energy Access and Affordability, and Jobs and Social Protection Transitions.Over the long term, Namibia will accelerate transformation through investments in renewable energy, green hydrogen and logistics infrastructure, while advancing economic diversification to reduce vulnerability to future shocks. These efforts contribute directly to the Climate, Biodiversity and Pollution Transition and broader national transformation priorities under NDP6 and the UNSDCF.These actions ensure that immediate responses to global shocks contribute to long-term development outcomes, resilience and sustainable economic transformation.Strengthening Accountability and MonitoringA key outcome of the SDDS is the emphasis on continued coordination, accountability and evidence-based monitoring.Progress will be tracked through continued dialogue, joint monitoring and alignment with national development priorities, ensuring that implementation remains responsive, transparent and results-oriented.The SDDS therefore functions not as a one-off event, but as a continuous mechanism for reviewing progress, informing policy adjustments and strengthening accountability across stakeholders.A Message of Resolve“Turbulence has never been Namibia’s final word,” said Mrs. Ndiitah Nghipondoka-Robiati.This reflects a shared commitment among Government and partners to not only respond to current challenges, but to shape a more resilient and inclusive future. Where Resilience Becomes RealFor the mother at the market, the farmer in the field and the entrepreneur navigating uncertainty, resilience will be measured in outcomes, in whether households can cope, whether livelihoods are protected and whether opportunities continue to expand.Namibia cannot control global turbulence, but it is taking decisive steps to shape how it responds.“Behind every data point is a household making difficult decisions. Our task is to ensure that policy translates into real relief, real opportunity and real protection for those most affected,” said Ms. Hopolang Phororo, United Nations Resident Coordinator.As implementation moves forward, the focus is clear: integrated action, aligned partnerships and sustained commitment to ensuring that resilience is not only planned, but delivered.