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Rodgers Akombe
wrote:
They say facts should not get in the way of juicy political promises.
That seems to be the case with Raila Odinga’s economic model for
Kenya. He has
promised to use 10%
of the GDP on infrastructure,
send 60% of the national revenue back to the Majimbo
(Provinces) and increase government expenditure on social programs.
On top of that he will not increase taxes and will pay government employees
more. All this seems to work in the political world but cannot work in a
real economy.
GDP is simply a sum of Consumer spending, Government expenditure, Investment,
and Net Export. Kenya
’s
GDP is about $41.4 billion
with government expenditure standing at about $5 billion. That makes
government spending about 12% of the GDP. From this 12%, Raila wants to
spend 10% on infrastructure. That leaves Raila with 2% of the GDP to spend
on Health, Education, National Defense, and so on. I wonder how Raila will
manage to split this 2% between free secondary education, universal healthcare
and other social programs.
We must also ask ourselves how Raila’s ambitious economy will work
when the central government will be left with 40% of national revenue after
sending 60% to regional governments. The Raila administration will have
to work with about $1.7 billion since our national revenue stands at about
$4.7 billion.
In this season of promises, we have to take promises with a pinch of
salt. It is imperative that we go through these promises with a fine comb
check for practicality. It is vital that our leaders strike a balance between
populism and pragmatism. I can promise you the moon; the problem is how
I deliver it.
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