Namibia’s capital paradox: why strong savings are not translating into growth

Namibia has built one of the more developed institutional investment bases in Africa. Pension and insurance assets exceed N$180 billion, representing more than 100% of GDP.  Yet this depth of capital has not consistently translated into broad-based economic growth. This creates a clear paradox: strong savings on one side, limited deployment into productive sectors on the other. 

At a panel on “The Future of Institutional Investing in Namibia – a Trustee Led Roadmap” at the 5th Namibia Institutional Investors Forum, led by Jesaya Hano-Oshike, Consultant at RisCura, panellists pointed to the Namibia Securities Exchange (NSX) as a potential source of developmental capital for public entities such as the Road Fund Administration and the City of Windhoek. 

Understanding Namibia’s capital paradox 

Namibia’s institutional investors hold significant pools of capital relative to the size of the economy. However, this capital is not being fully channelled into domestic investment opportunities that drive growth, employment and industrial development.  The result is a disconnect between capital availability and economic impact.

Why capital availability is not the problem 

As Hano-Oshike noted: 

“Namibia’s public capital markets remain relatively shallow, while private markets require significantly more risk capital to support emerging businesses and new sectors. At present, much of the capital in the market remains risk-averse.” 

The core issue is not how much capital exists, but how it is deployed.  Namibia’s challenge is less about savings accumulation and more about whether the market offers enough investment-ready opportunities. 

This reflects a broader pattern often seen in smaller or less diversified markets, where institutional capital is available, but the opportunity set remains narrow. 

Structural constraints in Namibia’s investment ecosystem 

Three structural constraints continue to shape capital deployment. 

Limited depth in public markets Namibia’s listed markets remain relatively small and illiquid. This constrains the ability of institutional investors to allocate capital at scale within domestic equities and bonds. 

The result is often a reliance on offshore markets or a concentration in a limited set of local assets. 

An uneven pipeline of investable opportunities
Sectors such as energy, infrastructure and industrial development offer long-term potential. However, the supply of bankable, investment-ready projects remains inconsistent. 

Without a stronger and more reliable pipeline, capital cannot be deployed efficiently or at scale. 

Conservative capital behaviour
Institutional investors are structurally risk-averse. In practice, this often limits participation in newer sectors or early-stage opportunities. 

While prudence is necessary, excessive risk aversion can slow capital allocation to areas where it is most needed for growth and diversification. 

What this means for economic growth 

These constraints create a persistent gap between capital and growth. 

Where capital is not mobilised into productive sectors, economic expansion remains constrained in both pace and scale. 

At the same time, expectations of institutional investors are evolving. There is increasing emphasis on contributing to long-term economic outcomes alongside capital preservation. 

This raises a key question: how can institutional capital play a more active developmental role without compromising risk discipline? 

How institutional capital can be mobilised more effectively 

Addressing this gap requires coordinated action across the investment ecosystem. 

  • Deepening capital markets by improving market liquidity and expanding listed opportunities. 
  • Strengthening the project pipeline through more consistent development of investment-ready projects, particularly in infrastructure and energy. 
  • Enabling structured risk-taking through blended finance, guarantees, and co-investment structures. 
  • Aligning stakeholders across asset owners, policymakers and project developers. 

The opportunity is clear. Namibia has already built the foundations of a strong institutional investment base. The next phase is ensuring that this capital is deployed in a way that supports sustainable growth and regional impact. 

As Hano-Oshike concluded: 

 “Unlocking stronger economic growth in Namibia will require broader investment opportunities, deeper market participation and more effective mobilisation of institutional capital into productive sectors of the economy.” 

For the latest market updates and to stay informed on Namibia, subscribe here: www.riscura.com/subscribe. 


FAQ 

(more…)

Continue Reading