REPORTS & NEWSLETTERS
Reports, Magazines, Newsletters, and More.
The Monetization of Romance: Courtship Fraud in Gaborone and Across Africa
The Gaborone dating market has been hijacked by an extractive gig economy. The Probe audits the Pre-Date Invoice, the Venture Capital Experiment, and the Woolworths Body / Choppies Brain paradox of modern courtship fraud.
What Comes After Diamonds? Botswana’s Economic Crossroads
Mineral revenue collapsed from P24 billion to P7.4 billion in two years. The Probe maps Botswana’s post-diamond crossroads — from the strategic diamond stockpile to agriculture, digital economy, and tourism.
Scrolled Away: Is Social Media Raising or Distracting Botswana’s Youth?
Social media is simultaneously Botswana’s fastest-growing youth economy and its most predatory distraction. The Probe audits the gambling pipelines, forex scams, and influence culture rewriting the futures of young Batswana.
Degrees in the Dark: Is Botswana Educating a Generation for a World That No Longer Exists?
Botswana’s graduates are chasing a shrinking set of opportunities in industries being dismantled by automation. The Probe asks whether the country’s education system is preparing students for an economy that no longer exists.
The Spice Ledger: Why Botswana’s Culinary Economy Outpaces Southern Africa
A 40-square-meter shop in Gaborone stocks spices that rival Johannesburg’s finest delicatessens. The Probe audits how Botswana’s bulk spice economy has democratized flavor across class lines in Southern Africa.
The Cost of Convenience: Auditing the Volume Gap in Botswana’s Produce Aisles
Eight potatoes for 40 Pula vs. a 10kg pocket for the same price. The Probe audits the supply chain gap between Gaborone’s formal retail aisles and the street economy — and names the Poverty Premium it creates.
Africa is Ready for Making and Consuming Electric Vehicles (EVs)
The electric vehicle (EV) market in sub-Saharan Africa is ripe for growth, with high awareness of EVs among drivers and a favorable total cost of ownership.
The Liquidity Trap: How Gaborone is Subsidizing the Illusion of Ride-Sharing
Hailing a ride in Gaborone reveals a systemic failure: ride-sharing platforms shift hidden economic and psychological costs onto Motswana drivers and passengers while the algorithm quietly collects its commission.
Emotional Elasticity: A New Theory of Human Response in Business and Investment
The Observation That Triggers the Theory The foundation of most business decisions is assumed to be rational. Investors evaluate ideas, markets, numbers, and execution potential. On the surface, capital appears to move toward opportunity. However, in practice,...
The Thucydides Trap: When a Rising Power Stops Asking for Permission
The Statement That Was Not a Question On May 14, 2026, during a high-stakes summit in Beijing, Chinese President Xi Jinping turned to his American counterpart and posed a question that had been simmering in the halls of global power for over a decade: “Can China and...
Performer vs. Operator: Why South Africans and Zimbabweans Clash – And Why They Need Each Other
Act I: The Clash That Wasn’t Conflict Across the borders and the cities, in construction sites, schools, hospitals, mines, and meeting rooms-there is a quiet tension that never quite explodes, but never disappears either. South Africans, born of rhythm and roar, feel...
Tembisa is Not Sandton: The Quiet Faith of Building vs. The Loud Force of Blaming
Two women. Born same year. Same country. But different worlds. In the theatre of modern South African life, there’s a tale not often told with clarity - a tale of method. Not morality. A tale of how one arrives at power, not just that one possesses it. And in this...
