Mmegi

Incentives Policy: A one-size approach that does not fit all

Presidential treatment: The athletics team at a dinner hosted by President Boko PIC: MOSA
Presidential treatment: The athletics team at a dinner hosted by President Boko PIC: MOSA

The 2012 Incentive Policy is seen as Godsent, particularly for athletics that has emerged as the biggest winners. From houses to handsome cash rewards, the policy has fully rewarded athletes, but under the same system, same document, other sportspersons can only dream of the perks that have gone to athletics. What can be done to ensure the policy that is under review, is accommodative, asks MQONDISI DUBE

Twice has the 4x400m relay team received houses from the government under the Incentives Policy, a document that came into effect in 2012, developed to address gaps in rewarding sportspersons. Star athlete, Letsile Tebogo, has two houses under his name, as the scheme only applies to medals won at the Olympic Games. The financial rewards have mostly gone athletics' way, with others left to contend with crumbs for doing well in continental and lesser competitions. Athletics has been, by far, the best performing code that has truly challenged at a global level, with all of Botswana's three medals at the Olympics coming through athletics. Winning a world competition pays fat dividends, with the prize money diminishing at the regional and continental levels, where most local sportspersons have peers. Other than athletics, Botswana is yet to assemble a globally competitive team, bar the recent exploits of Ross Branch.

Athletics cannot be faulted for its acceleration at the global stage, with the Incentives Policy lauded for rewarding athletes for their sweat and blood. But could the Incentives Policy bar too high for most codes, with some targets seemingly unattainable? Besides athletes, very few local sportspersons have consistently challenged for medals at a global event. The Zebras, for instance, have struggled to reach just the finals of a continental competition, the Africa Cup of Nations. Reaching the finals is regarded as an achievement, with a very limited chance of the team progressing beyond the group stages. Winning is a remote possibility, meaning the purse is safe as the Zebras players are rank outsiders to hit the Incentives Policy jackpot. The requirements are the same across codes, but circumstances remain distinctly different. Botswana is proving to be a genuinely competitive athletics country, regularly producing prodigious talent that has stood the test against some of the finest runners from around the world. Athletics, therefore, is an exception; a gifted student planted in the midst of average performers. It is not far-fetched to link the development of the Incentives Policy to athletics, as it was conceived around the time when Amantle Montsho had been crowned world champion, whilst Nijel Amos had just won the country's first-ever Olympic medal. The Zebras had also done well the year before, managing their first-ever progress to the AFCON finals.

Editor's Comment
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