UPND unveils ambitious blueprint for jobs, growth and lower living costs
The United Party for National Development (UPND) has unveiled its 2026 Manifesto, presenting a far-reaching plan to create jobs, expand economic opportunities, reduce the cost of living and accelerate national development under the theme “Zambia Forward, Together.” The document positions the party’s first five years in office as a period of economic rescue and rebuilding, while setting out a vision for a second term focused on delivery, growth and improved living standards for ordinary citizens.
At the centre of the manifesto is a simple political message prominently featured in the document: “Bally Loves. Bally Cares. Bally Delivers. But there is still more work to be done.” The slogan reflects the governing party’s argument that significant progress has already been made, but that Zambia’s transformation remains unfinished and requires continued implementation of reforms and investments.
The manifesto begins by highlighting what the party considers its major achievements between 2021 and 2026, including the introduction of free education, debt restructuring, expansion of the Constituency Development Fund (CDF), recruitment of thousands of teachers and health workers, restoration of international confidence in Zambia’s economy and the reduction of inflation to single digits. The UPND argues that these achievements have created a stable platform upon which broader economic growth can now be built.
Looking ahead, the party identifies job creation as its overriding national priority.
Two million jobs at the heart of the agenda
The manifesto commits to working with the private sector to create two million new jobs, with deliberate emphasis on opportunities for young people and women. Government plans include expanding entrepreneurship programmes, establishing a Youth Enterprise Growth Fund and increasing access to financing for small and medium-sized businesses.
The party also pledges to more than double Technical Education, Vocational and Entrepreneurship Training (TEVET) enrolment, enabling more than 100,000 young people to access industry-linked training, internships and employment opportunities.
According to the manifesto, industrial parks, logistics corridors, farm blocks and value-addition centres will be developed across the country to ensure economic opportunities reach every province and district.
Agriculture positioned as the backbone of growth
Agriculture occupies a central place in the UPND’s vision for the next five years.
The party has set a target of producing 10 million metric tonnes of maize, including three million metric tonnes under irrigation, alongside one million metric tonnes of wheat and three million metric tonnes of soya beans. It also aims to place an additional 500,000 hectares under irrigation as part of efforts to reduce dependence on rainfall and improve climate resilience.
The manifesto proposes significant investment in irrigation infrastructure, mechanisation, agro-processing facilities, storage systems and digital agricultural services. Government also intends to continue reforming the Farmer Input Support Programme (FISP) while expanding access to agricultural finance and extension services.
In the livestock sector, the party is targeting a cattle population of 11 million head and annual beef exports worth US$1 billion, supported by disease-control programmes, improved veterinary services and expanded market access.
Mining expansion and industrialisation
Mining remains one of the pillars of the proposed development strategy.
The UPND has set a target of increasing annual copper production to three million metric tonnes, more than tripling current production levels. To achieve this, the manifesto promises support for new large-scale mining projects, expanded exploration activities, stable mining policies and improved geological mapping.
The party also intends to promote value addition in critical minerals such as cobalt, lithium, manganese, nickel and rare earth elements, with greater emphasis on domestic processing and industrial development.
Alongside mining, the manifesto outlines plans to transform Zambia into a regional manufacturing hub by reducing production costs, supporting industrial investment and leveraging regional trade opportunities under SADC, COMESA and the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).
Powering Zambia’s future
A major feature of the manifesto is its commitment to ending power insecurity and supporting economic growth through expanded electricity generation.
The UPND has set a target of increasing national generation capacity from about 3,400 megawatts to more than 10,000 megawatts through investments in solar, hydro, wind and thermal energy projects.
Government also plans to strengthen the national grid, expand rural electrification and support mini-grid and off-grid solutions to ensure more communities have access to reliable electricity.
The party argues that reliable energy will be essential for supporting growth in mining, agriculture, manufacturing and tourism.
Building infrastructure and a digital economy
The manifesto places strong emphasis on infrastructure as a driver of economic productivity.
Planned interventions include upgrading major road corridors, rehabilitating rail networks, modernising border infrastructure and developing logistics hubs to improve trade efficiency and lower transport costs.
Government also intends to expand broadband connectivity, digitise public services and connect more than 100 rural communities to the digital economy through the Smart Village Programme. The manifesto further outlines plans for a 24-hour economy in selected urban centres and border towns to unlock new investment and employment opportunities.
Reducing the cost of living
Acknowledging the pressures faced by many households, the UPND says reducing the cost of living will be one of its principal objectives.
The manifesto argues that long-term improvements in living standards depend on job creation, increased agricultural productivity, stable prices, affordable access to finance and sustained macroeconomic discipline.
It also promises continued support for vulnerable households through social protection programmes while expanding opportunities for families to participate in productive economic activities.
Education, health and human development
The party has pledged to protect and strengthen free education while expanding classroom infrastructure and recruiting additional teachers.
A key promise is the establishment of public universities in provinces that currently do not have one, including Luapula, Northern, North-Western, Western, Southern and Eastern provinces. The manifesto also proposes major expansion of vocational and technical education to equip young people with practical skills for a changing economy.
In health, Government plans to continue recruiting medical personnel, expanding healthcare infrastructure and improving the availability of essential medicines. Greater emphasis will also be placed on prevention, mental health services and preparedness for future public health emergencies.
Five pillars for the next five years
The UPND’s programme is organised around five broad pillars:
Growing the Economy through jobs, agriculture, mining, manufacturing and tourism.
Connecting the Nation through energy, transport infrastructure and digital connectivity.
Serving the People through education, healthcare, water, housing and social protection.
Building an Efficient, Effective and Delivery-Oriented Public Sector through governance reforms and accountability.
Financing the Future through investment mobilisation, public-private partnerships and access to capital.
The manifesto presents a vision of Zambia moving beyond economic stabilisation towards accelerated growth, industrialisation and expanded opportunity. Through ambitious targets on jobs, agriculture, mining, energy and infrastructure, the UPND is seeking to persuade voters that the foundations have been laid and that the next phase should focus on delivering tangible improvements in livelihoods across the country.
For the governing party, the message is clear: the first term was about fixing the fundamentals; the next term, it says, will be about delivering growth, jobs and prosperity for all Zambians. And as the manifesto repeatedly reminds voters: “Bally Loves. Bally Cares. Bally Delivers.”
Download the Manifesto here





People have heard about this rhetoric before
Rhetoric as usual , he does not talk about K250 fertiliser, K50 mealie meal or K12 fuel anymore.
Things do not magically reduce,work has to be done.
Time lines were even given in 2021. Sworn in at 10hrs kwacha picking at 14 hrs. After failure, ati things dont work magically.
The agony is………
Using multiple accounts and counting them as separate pipo, then thinking you have support, when.,..
Everyone knows it is the person………
Zambia Forward, Together…….FFT2041
@John Daka
The President doesn’t sell mealie meal, fertiliser or fuel.
Work hard to earn more so that you can afford to pay more for mealie meal so that the farmer can get a good profit from selling his maize to the miller. Fertiliser is going to be produced in Zambia, therefore cutting off the middle men. Fuel prices are determined on the international market. It has nothing to do with Bally. If you work hard and earn more, you will be able to afford a BYD hybrid that will take you far on 70 L! Stop expecting the government to spoon feed you!
Who in Zambia today can say anything has improved? None. Don’t promise and run away from your promises. Excuses all the time
@Musaninyoze
Are you sure when he was making those promises, he did not know how fuel prices are determined. Are you now buying fuel at K12. Are you buying fertiliser at K250, when it is even produced locally now. It is double the price now. Governance is just something else, it had to take Gonzales to tell you in the face.
Just 2 points of focus could have made sense.
– Agricultural development, open 1 government commercial farm in each province. 10000 jobs.
– Fisheries development, commercial restocking all lakes. Import fish from Namibia and dump lakes and rivers. Did you know Lake Kariba was stocked with imported fish in 50s?
Building an economy that will stand the test of time, not the PF tulyemo thieves and thugs.
Blessed are those who will not be cheated twice
Zambia Forward, Together…….FFT2041
2021 promises are still pending now we have new promises in 2026.
Zambia Forward, Together…….FFT2041
So where is the Tonse manifesto so we compare? Or are they just saying “iwe we left fuel at k17!” And expecting success on that basis?
It will be launched this weekend, you will see how smart it is.
Even in 2021 the manifesto was ambitious. What have we gotten at the end of 5 years, the squalor and poverty has even increased ten fold. What type of reduced inflation is this that does not affect the pocket
Zambia Forward, Together…….FFT2041
Still making more promises? Unbelievable
Zambia Forward, Together…….FFT2041
Free education – UNIP
CDF – MMD
Quality Infrastructure development – PF
Zambia Forward, Together…….FFT2041
Guys, the best model is the Botswana Malawi model. One term out. No vi si li li anymore
Zambia Forward, Together…….FFT2041
Ambitious blueprints that appear only at election time.
Only to dissappear once elected
Open Mulungushi textile please!
Bally is also a story teller
Unfortunately for him w are adults and past that stage
He was desparate to be president now has achieved that so now go back to farming or whatever
Bally Loves. Bally Cares. Bally Delivers.
Zambia forward together
ZFT2041
Like the previous one, poorly structured piece. Looks like it’s a copy and paste material from a text book. President HH’s two terms risk going down as wasted decade. All you need is to ask the president how much of what he has listed will be achieved by December 2026……? A Bantu babepwa pafula by politicians