Friday, June 19, 2009

Is it just me or the budget?

I'd blindly refrain from commenting on economic matters simply because that's like using the top part of my hand to hold a cup. However, when i pored through our long awaited 2009-10 national budget, i as convinced that our national economic unit has artists for planners, and historians for macro-economists. This is the case, then i have right to comment.

I once attended a budget sector hearing meeting for ICT at the refurbished KICC (thank Raphael Tuju for that) and various interest groups and lobbyists poured their hearts out to the chair on the need to have their plight addressed through policy and budgetary measures that would see them able to compete against other big players in kenya and within the region. The process seemed very appropriate and accommodating. I would be glad to know if this happens for other sectors and especially education and agriculture for very dashboard reasons.

Believe it or not but our government gulps 600 plus billions to deliver 200 plus billions of development. To equate this to your ordinary Kenyans lives, its like spending 6 shillings a day on transport for a job that pays you 2 shillings a day. Garbage right? I think so too. Now, this garbage has gone on even long after the advent of rightsizing and e-government. My quick point is, we have limited resources and must therefore use them effectively. Apart from a bloated government and civil service full of otherwise unemployable self seeking tards, we continue to lack leadership that's daring enough to offload the excess weight (somewhat like that excess body weight we all want to loose) and have a lean fucntioning government that's low in resource consumption and high on productivity/service delivery. This is no easy pill and rightly so because this is Kenya. As years go by and we stand aside living in shame, our pill for transformation is getting bitter.

My point is a no brainer and two fold. By merely reducing the security budget from a whooping 87 billion which cant even kick the Mungiki headache away, let's allocate a third of it to agriculture to mechanise our so called corner-stone of the economy. Without taking a survey, any youth whose recently taken the Mungiki oath would easily be lured to the opportunity of farming made easy and for a profit. Not to mention that a Mungiki recruit is your potential farmer gone frustrated and idle. Secondly, take another third of it to improve our academic institutions through a soaking program from our teachers to wake-up to the new world of peer learning and student mentorship, refurbishing of schools and the introduction of a nationwide distance/continuous learning program to make learning not a place to go but a thing to do. I have purposely left out other sectors to establish a smoker-like habit for this blog which will address them continuously.

Africa and Africans, by virtue of having limited resources (debateable) must instictively strive to do more with less. The difference between developed and developing countries is their knack for proper planning and execution of projects at rational cost and with elaborate benefits. Waste is unacceptable. In Kenya, we callously spend billions to stack on shelves (inquires, startegic plans, scoping etc) and proceed without care. This must simply stop.

Share you thoughts!