Every nation has defining moments; the announcement of a flagship development project or a major foreign investment. Others pass quietly, buried beneath technical language and unfamiliar acronyms. Yet it is often these quieter moments that shape a country’s future. Eswatini’s admission into the Egmont Group of Financial Intelligence Units is one of them. To many, it sounds like another bureaucratic milestone. It is anything but. Through admitting the Eswatini Financial Intelligence Centre (EFIC) into a network of more than 180 Financial Intelligence Units, the international community has recognised that the kingdom has built an institution capable of meeting some of the world’s highest standards in combating money laundering, terrorist financing and organised financial crime.
In today’s economy, credibility is capital. Investors increasingly judge countries not only by tax incentives or natural resources, but by the strength of their institutions. Eswatini earned this recognition through years of legislative reform, stronger oversight and independent scrutiny. It is a reminder that lasting national progress is rarely dramatic. It is built quietly, one competent institution at a time. That achievement deserves applause because strong anti-money laundering systems protect far more than international financial markets. They protect domestic economies from corruption, organised crime and illicit financial flows that undermine honest businesses. Criminal syndicates flourish where institutions are weak and regulators work in isolation. They struggle where authorities cooperate and money can be traced. Recent events suggest Eswatini is steadily moving in that direction. The Royal Eswatini Police Service recently received international recognition for its contribution to INTERPOL’s Operation First Light 2026, with intelligence generated in Eswatini reportedly contributing to arrests beyond the kingdom’s borders. Together with EFIC’s admission into the Egmont Group, these developments point to a country becoming an active participant in safeguarding the integrity of the global financial system rather than merely responding to threats after the fact. Yet the real significance of this progress lies beyond international recognition. Credibility should not be viewed as an end in itself. It is a national asset that must now be used to strengthen the domestic economy.
For years, government has invested billions of Emalangeni in roads, schools, hospitals and other public infrastructure. Those projects have improved the country’s physical landscape, but too often the greatest financial rewards have flowed elsewhere. Large contracts are routinely awarded to foreign companies that complete the work, repatriate their profits and leave local firms with little more than subcontracting opportunities. The infrastructure remains, but much of the wealth generated by public expenditure leaves the kingdom with them.
There is nothing unlawful about profit repatriation. The problem is economic rather than legal. Every Lilangeni retained by a competitive local business circulates through suppliers, workers, graduates, taxpayers and communities before leaving the economy. That multiplier effect is one of the reasons developed countries deliberately use procurement policies, local-content requirements and supplier development programmes to ensure public spending strengthens domestic enterprise. Eswatini should adopt the same principle. This is not an argument against foreign investment; international expertise and capital remain indispensable. It is an argument for ensuring that, wherever local capacity exists, local businesses are first in line to build the nation they call home. Government procurement should not simply deliver roads and hospitals. It should deliberately create stronger local companies capable of competing beyond Eswatini’s borders. The country’s growing institutional credibility should also become one of its strongest defences against briefcase entrepreneurs. Across Africa, governments continue to confront individuals who promise transformational investments, only for investigations to expose exaggerated claims, questionable funding or outright fraud. Such schemes do more than steal money. They undermine confidence in genuine investors and exploit the hopes of ordinary citizens.
This is where stronger financial intelligence becomes indispensable. Better due diligence, closer international cooperation and the ability to trace financial flows make it increasingly difficult for fraudulent investors to exploit regulatory weaknesses or use Eswatini as a conduit for illicit activity. Institutions capable of satisfying the Egmont Group’s exacting standards are equally capable of distinguishing genuine investors from opportunists.
Membership of the Egmont Group should, therefore, become more than an international accolade. It should mark the beginning of a broader economic strategy. The same institutions capable of protecting the global financial system should also protect the domestic economy by screening investors more rigorously and ensuring that public expenditure creates lasting local wealth instead of merely financing completed projects. After all, who is better placed to trust local businesses than their own government? Eswatini has done the difficult part.
It has persuaded more than 180 jurisdictions that its institutions can be trusted. The next challenge is less diplomatic and more deliberate: ensuring those same institutions trust, develop and prioritise the people they were created to serve. International credibility should not end with protecting money from criminals. It should extend to protecting the wealth created by emaSwati, rewarding genuine local enterprise and ensuring that public investment leaves behind more than roads and buildings. It should leave behind stronger businesses, skilled jobs and an economy that grows from within.
That is how credibility matures into prosperity.