We have Kenyan companies building Highways in Botswana. They are led by Njoroges and Kamaus and Ochiengs. It is not a matter of local capacity but complacency and impunity. A contractor is paid according to milestones right? No delivered product no payment. Why would a contractor waste years if he is not getting paid? Best incentive in my opinion. On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 9:38 AM, Emmanuel Khisa <oloo.khisa@googlemail.com>wrote:
@ Mark, I do think that we would *ever* have heard roads done if ever
we used Kenyan Contractors...sorry to say this but look how far we got during the pre Kibaki era with contractors that did a 10km of a road for 5 years and still never completed them...I think one credit I would give the China Bridge and Co and H Young and Straberg is that they actually did up the game...
I otherwise agree with you on the rest of the points raised above.
On Tue, Nov 19, 2013 at 9:35 AM, Emmanuel Khisa <oloo.khisa@googlemail.com
wrote:
@ Mark, I do think that we would never have heard roads done if ever we used Kenyan Contractors...sorry to say this but look how far we got during the pre Kibaki era with contractors that did a 10km of a road for 5 years and still never completed them...I think one credit I would give the China Bridge and Co and H Young and Straberg is that they actually did up the game...
I otherwise agree with you on the rest of the points raised above.
I agree with Adam albeit partly. Running to make everything under the sun is no a smart move. However building horizontal industries where products from one industry feed another and by products are the base of another shoulfd be encouraged. Building spare parts for local cars is an example.
A knowledge economy is a good foundation but we still need to build and make stuff. e.g Swiss chocolate, german cars, American Missiles, Chinese iPhones etc. Am yet to see a stable economy that doesn't manufacture and export physical goods.
On Mon, Nov 18, 2013 at 10:03 PM, Adam Nelson <adam@varud.com> wrote:
The first sentence does not lead to the second and third:
"We cannot have high unemployment, and at the same time import clothes from Sri Lanka or mitumba, when we can grow cotton and make our
clothes. We
must defy economic explanations on what works and what does not work. If we deployed thousands of youth digitizing land records, we would reduce caseloads in courts, become more efficient, and create more wealth to grow our economy."
Kenya should go towards counter-cyclical employment of youth doing productive infrastructure work: being teachers, building railroads, digitizing land records, etc...
However, you can't forget Adam Smith who talked extensively of Comparative Advantage (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparative_advantage). Sri Lanka (or really Bangladesh) has a far more economical solution for producing cotton clothing than Kenya has. This mostly has to do with the port of Mombassa being a stranglehold and the fact that a 40M person economy (Kenya) doesn't have the same economy of scale as a billion person economy (a guess at the number of people a Bangladeshi factory can export to easily).
Kenya is a small country and a small economy and if it wants to bring in more money and reduce unemployment, the solution is around creating an amazingly well-educated population and doing more knowledge work - not producing more clothing.
-- Kili.io - OpenStack for Africa: kili.io Musings: twitter.com/varud About Adam: www.linkedin.com/in/adamcnelson
On Mon, Nov 18, 2013 at 9:21 PM, Kivuva <Kivuva@transworldafrica.com> wrote:
Dr. Ndemo has struck a cord that has been played in this list countless times before. I remember him saying in another thread "you cannot have unemployed youth yet we have countless garbage lining our streets and estates!"
His argument on us importing cloths yet we can do it here is basic economic that any country can master. India went that way through the leadership of Mahatma.
But Dr. Ndemo, in the previous administration that you served so ardently, the government shipped billions worth of capital on works that could be done by Kenyans. I'm talking about the massive infrastructure development that took place in the last 10years. That capital could have done our unemployed generation justice if it was utilized here home. I believe Kenyans can build decent roads, brides, buildings and ports. What happened to national pride? It's the same argument of importing cloths or planting cotton and producing our own garments.
We're still not out of the woods yet, remember the Korean firm implementing the PKI?
My cent-less
On 18/11/2013, Dorcas Muthoni <dmuthoni@gmail.com> wrote:
A good piece by Dr. Bitange Ndemo
*We must be more pragmatic to resolve Kenya's high unemployment*
http://www.nation.co.ke/oped/blogs/dot9/-/1959700/2077756/-/oodsogz/-/index....
-- Muthoni
My Blog: http://rugongo.blogspot.com/ -------------------------------------------- Mahatma Gandhi once said:-
First they ignore you, Then they laugh at you, Then they fight you, AND THEN YOU WIN!!!
-- ______________________ Mwendwa Kivuva twitter.com/lordmwesh kenya.or.ke | The Kenya we know
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*Oloo KhisaP.O. Box 24324-00100Nairobi0721321086 <0721321086>/0731849128 <0731849128>http://ke.linkedin.com/in/olookhisa <http://ke.linkedin.com/in/olookhisa>*
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