Friday 16 November 2018

Of the Chinese Fish, Imbalanced Trade, Debt & Market Captivity

“Debt is a cleverly managed reconquest of Africa.” – Thomas Sankara.
“He who feeds you, controls you.” – Thomas Sankara.

While acknowledging the importance of borrowing as a measure aimed at financing key projects and economic activities for a country, the primary concern remains the sustainability of debt, and how debt financing affects the overall economic performance.

With a number of debt analysts, for instance the Jubilee Debt Campaign, pointing out to an impending debt crisis for African countries, it would be fundamental to first consider the politics and economics of external debt, and secondly, the conditionalities attached to it.

In regards to the politics and economics of external debt, the late Thomas Sankara aptly summarizes it in terms of the reconquest of Africa. Essentially, loans advanced by various entities are repaid with interest, and this generates income for the creditors. As such, more Chinese debt for the African countries means more income for China, a similar case with the World Bank and other creditors.

Politically, geopolitical ambitions fuel the need for the formation and adoption of the so-called mutual trading partnerships. Elementally, such partnerships largely benefit the foreign entities that issue out loans to the developing economies.

Africa is a card shuffled by foreigners for ages resulting in dehumanizing statements such as “whoever controls Africa controls the world.” From the Arab slave trade, the Trans-Atlantic trade, colonialism and currently the neo-colonialism era, foreigners dictate the pace of Africa’s game at the global stage.

Part of the foreigners’ games of strategy include foreign aid whose failures override its successes. Advancing foreign aid in form of loans and grants comes attached with conditionalities. The World Bank and the Western states especially in the 1980s and 90s often offered foreign aid with calls for adoption of democratic institutions and market-oriented economic policies. This changed following China’s increased presence in Africa with African countries preferring to partner with the Dragon on the account of issuing loans without conditionalities.

The perception that the Chinese loans come with no conditionalities is a lie! It is commonsense economics that there is no free lunch and there must be a trade-off between cooperating entities. Therefore, for China, issuing loans to African countries is not enough. Access to African markets is a condition inherently pegged on the Chinese loans.

Recently, Uhuru Kenyatta banned the importation of fish from China arguing that the local fish market was on a free-fall. In response to the supposed ban, China, through her ambassador to Kenya Li Xuhang termed it as a trade war while threatening to impose trade sanctions including cutting funding for the economically unviable standard gauge railway line. However, the threats by the Dragon never took effect following the suspension of the ban by the Kenyan government.

Back to the moral sentiments of the indefatigable Thomas Sankara, whoever feeds you controls you. Signing of economic partnerships between African countries and foreign entities involves so many underhand deals that are never disclosed to the public. Such covert deals, in the case of China, seek to create markets for the Chinese goods, and employment for the Chinese people. The government’s suspension of the ban on Chinese fish and China’s threats exemplify the Sankarist view on foreign aid, and dispel the notion that China’s loans are free from conditionalities.

Ordinarily, trade relationships between two countries need to be a win-win affair but the so-called economic partnerships propagated by China can best be classified as highly parasitic and imbalanced.

Take a look at the trade statistics between Kenya and China and notice how it is highly imbalanced. According to the July-September 2018 issue of the Policy Monitor magazine published by the Kenya Institute of Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA), Kenya imported Chinese goods worth Kshs.390 billion in 2017 and exported commodities worth Kshs.9.9 billion to China in the same year.

An anachronistic plan hatched by China in 2016 to lure the East African Community member states to signing a free trade agreement with her indicates an aggressive ambition by the Asian nation to capture and control the markets of the region.

Luckily, the Kenyan government rejected the trade arrangement which would have led to the death of the Kenyan industries especially the medium and small microenterprises. In as much as this move may be termed as protectionist, it is necessary that the Kenyan government adopt highly protectionist policies to promote the growth and development of the manufacturing sector, key in creating a high number of employment opportunities.  

Free trade favors advanced economies and leaves the poor, developing countries worse off. China’s intentions to convince the East African Community member states to sign the free trade agreement ignores the global economic history of development. China and the Asian Tigers realized faster economic growth and development on the basis of policies protecting the infant industries, the same case with the now classified developed economies like the USA, Germany, Britain and others.

Going back to the reaction by the Chinese ambassador to Kenya, he bluffed that Kenya’s ban on imported Chinese fish was against “the principle of free trade, the rule of law, adherence to bilateral agreements and the rules of the World Trade Organization (WTO).” All these aforementioned trade doctrines will never work in favor of developing countries including Kenya because of their skewed nature working to the advantage of the advanced economies.

Fast forward, was the ban on the imported Chinese fish doomed to fail? Possibly yes. In June this year, the not-so-competent Cabinet Secretary in charge of the Ministry of Agriculture, Mwangi Kiunjuri, came to the defense of the importation of the Chinese fish stating that the supply in the local market never met the demand. Quite logical.

But there are fundamental issues which if addressed would ward off the importation of fish from China. The first issue is to incentivize the production of fish especially in geographical areas where fishing is one of the main economic activities. Additionally, fish farming has to be encouraged but this should be among communities familiar with fishing.

As matter-of-factly, the Kshs.60 million fish processing factory built in Nyeri County in 2015, following the introduction of fish farming in the region as part of the 2009/2010 Economic Stimulus Programme (ESP), is now considered to be a white elephant with its location among a community not accustomed to eating fish heavily influencing its collapse.

Lack of initiative by the Jubilee administration to address the root cause of the increased importation of fish from China is deliberate. Kenya is China’s captive market and with the Chinese loans and/or debts, the Mandarins will dictate what they want in exchange for their financial and technical assistance.

Failure of Kenya and other African countries to learn from history is the bane for their economic floundering. Western powers considered African countries to be captive markets during the colonial era and thereafter in the post-colonial period. The same script is being played by China; on advancing ‘cheap’ loans and controlling the markets. This is neo-colonialism and lack of economic independence.

Therefore, increase in the importation of Chinese fish has got more to do with Kenya being a captive market as a consequence of borrowing finances from China than the purported high demand and lower supply in the local fish market.

Saturday 22 September 2018

When Austerity Measures Become the Answer: On Statements of Convenience



Image: Courtesy
“…But we still face a financing gap. This measure will not suffice to balance our budget, as required by law. It is my responsibility to put Kenyans first. I must balance between short-term pain and long-term gain.” – Uhuru Kenyatta.

“We must grow the economy, and we can only do this through additional taxes, so Kenyans must dig deeper into their pockets for this to happen.” – Henry Rotich.

When desperate situations dictate that desperate measures be adopted, then wobbly, wanton statements of convenience such as the above two become common.

I still find it ridiculous that members of the general public are up in arms against the proposed taxation measures contained in the Finance Bill 2018 signed into law by Uhuru Kenyatta.

Any sober Kenyan ought not to be surprised by the Executive’s desperate attempts to clutch at a straw considering that the Jubilee administration has a record of being in favour of contorted economic policies, a clear demonstration of its incompetence.

Economic mismanagement under the Jubilee administration is no longer news with the undemocratic process of passing the Finance Bill in the National Assembly sending a signal of a broke government managed by masters of “brick and mortar development.”

“Brick and mortar development” in this case refers to the development narrative fashioned by the current administration that hugely focuses on very costly infrastructural projects with lower returns on investment than say agriculture whose potential in terms of reducing poverty levels is quite high.

Kenya’s public finance is faced with the problem of unnecessary spending which the Executive is running around like headless chicken to curb.

It is on record that the Jubilee administration has adopted the liking for huge budgets with massive deficits. Financing these massive deficits necessitated increased borrowing in the name of prioritizing flagship mega projects none of which seems to have yielded any returns or promising to do so in the long-term.

Good examples of such projects include the standard gauge railway line and the Galana-Kulalu food security project whose dismal performances raise serious doubts on whether feasibility studies were conducted before being commissioned.

Just like business enterprises or organizations which collapse majorly due to poor cash flow management, the case is not different for countries which are brought down because of poor management of public finances.

Each spending ought to be accounted for but owing to Kenya’s disturbing public finance history then the misses in regards to spending are highly visible. It is well known that a third of the country’s budget is never accounted for, a fact ignored by the Executive and Parliament, and leads to billions of shillings being lost.

Big budgets have no merit at all if the process of accountability is not taken seriously. In as much as the Jubilee administration would want to pretend to be keen on driving the development agenda, the truth of the matter is that development cannot be achieved by failing to take into account the fundamentals that occasion socio-economic progress.

Fundamentals such as allocating financial resources to sectors where the poor eke out their living like the informal sector in addition to running a clean, mean and lean government are prerequisites for moving all people up the escalator.

One of the unnecessary narratives sold at the moment by the Jubilee administration is the legacy of one Uhuru Kenyatta premised on the 2022 succession politics. I believe his legacy was framed during his first term in office and there is nothing much he can convincingly do to be in the right books of Kenya’s politico-economic history.

With the austerity measures targeting to cut spending by Kshs.52 billion, there are grave concerns on how Treasury will plug the Kshs.600 billion deficit for the current financial year. The country’s economic woes in regards to raising revenue and spending primarily stem from the borrowing which the Jubilee administration has used as a tool to pursue its development agenda hinged on mega projects.

Economically speaking, the most suitable way to address an economic challenge is to identify its root-cause. For the current situation, the root-cause lies first in the administration’s big budgets with huge deficits and secondly, the excessive borrowing.

Fronting austerity measures would not be the ideal policy prescription to curb the budgetary constraints. Rather, the most viable policy at this time would be to heavily cut on borrowing though it is a policy that can't be used in isolation. It can best be used by combining it with significant cuts on spending. 

Governments facing financial crises have always turned to austerity policy measures as shock therapy to address their economic difficulties. Austerity measures hardly lead to economic progress since people’s levels of income in the economy do not rise in line with the tax increases. In fact, considering the tax increases that lead to a rise in the cost of living, people’s level of income actually falls.

Historically, when governments are suddenly compelled to pursue austerity policies there is no doubt that they are staring at economic crises.

Good politics, as they say, is bad economics. This has highly been exemplified by the Jubilee administration. Amid concerns that the debt level was spiraling upwards at an alarming rate due to excessive borrowing, the issue turned political with the administration defending itself on the basis of various globally approved metrics.

Firstly, the administration’s top guns and ignorant supporters would state that the World Bank’s threshold for public debt to GDP ratio for developing economies is 74%. Kenya’s current debt to GDP ratio is 60%. Secondly, unintelligent comparisons of the country’s public debt with that of other developed or strong emerging economies would be put up.

There is a fundamental problem when a country spends half of its revenue on debt repayment. Such is Kenya’s case with Treasury having allocated Kshs.870 billion towards repayment of debt against targeted revenue of Kshs.1.8 trillion for the 2018/2019 financial year.

Elementally, the World Bank’s metric on debt to GDP ratio ignores the fact that the 74% has to be considered in the context of an economy’s productivity. Kenya’s debt repayment taking half of the revenue is a sign of the economy’s low productivity.

Drawing comparisons between Kenya’s debt level with those of advanced economies misses the mark. More developed economies are highly productive and repay their debts at lower interest rates unlike Kenya.

As a matter of fact, comparing the debt situation with say USA (105% of GDP) or Japan (253%) or any other advanced economy is a statement of convenience. Folks fond of propagating this argument would never want to mention some of the African countries whose economic fortunes faltered with relatively high debt levels.

Ghana, for instance, experienced financial problems when its debt to GDP ratio hit above 65%. Mozambique’s ratio was 115% as at 2017 with the country’s economy grinding to a halt forcing government officials to endlessly knock the doors of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Zambia’s debt to GDP ratio in 2017 was 62% yet the country is experiencing economic difficulties due to debt distress. These are examples of what the supporters of the regime failed/fail to mention.

Reality of the austerity measures has suddenly enraged the administration’s supporters to regret their voting decision. This is pretence. Jubilee has messed up the economy from 2013 and it has nothing new to offer Kenyans except presiding over more economic misery.

Uhuru Kenyatta definitely lied about short-term pain and long-term gain. Kenyans should instead prepare for long-term pain with the gain not in any way in sight.

Rotich bears the tag of Kenya’s most incompetent Treasury chief since 1963. Additional taxes cannot grow the economy, instead they are bound to increase inequality and make the society worse off.

But even as Kenyans complain loudly about Jubilee’s incompetence it should serve as a reminder on why elections are moments to evaluate those in power and vote them out for their failures. Let the administration increase taxes the way it wants after all it is the government of the so-called majority that voted without serious thinking.

Sometimes enduring moments of pain does not necessarily lead to making a gain, and that is the case when administering shock therapy (austerity policy prescriptions) to a mismanaged economy.

Monday 10 September 2018

On IMF’s Visible Hand: A Look into the Outcry on the Fuel Prices, Policy Missteps & the Dishonesty about It.

The National Treasury
Image: Courtesy
It’s a herculean task to be a Kenyan, a situation exacerbated by the policy missteps and misgovernance of the Jubilee administration.

From the plundering of trillions of money, the implementation of cost-ineffective projects, the dominance of two ethnic communities in government, a dejected and highly unemployed youth, hoarding of maize, consumption of poisonous food products, wanton increase in taxes and many others, it requires the common Kenyan some world-class grit to go through all these necessary evils.

But considering the concerns raised by the Kenyan public in regards to the aforementioned issues, one should not forget the dishonesty that is conveniently sidestepped while debating on these policy matters.

A good example is the debate on the recent increase in prices of petroleum products which has to be revisited while drawing out the facts and fallacies, the faults and dishonesty about it.

General Understanding
A general understanding of the visible hand of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in view of Kenya’s situation is elemental bearing in mind that this debate is full of misinformation.

To begin with, it would be important to look at the primary role (s) of the IMF for the benefit of the general public and the pseudo-economists.

IMF has three main functions: monitoring of economic and financial developments and offering policy advice to prevent economic/financial crises; offering loans to countries facing balance of payments difficulties; and provision of technical assistance and training in line with its scope of work.

As matter-of-factly, the institution’s Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) and Standby Credit Facility (SCF) are primarily lending frameworks that are intended to help countries facing the balance of payments difficulties.

Essentially, the balance of payments difficulties refer to a situation whereby a country is importing more goods, services and capital than what it is exporting. Thus, the SBA is a lending framework that allows the IMF to provide financial assistance mostly to the middle-income and advanced economies in the event of a financial crisis. On the other hand, the SCF is a framework that allows the IMF to provide financial assistance to low-income countries with the goal of correcting the short-term balance of payments problems.

Kenya’s agreement with IMF comprises of an SBA of $989.9 million and SCF of approximately $494.9 million.

Fundamentally, access to the SBA and SCF is based on the criteria determined by the IMF and at its minimum, the consenting countries are expected to implement conditionalities fronted by the Fund and pursue policies aimed at correcting the balance of payment problems.

Genesis of the Current Situation
In 2013, the Executive through The National Treasury and the Central Bank outlined a raft of policy measures meant to improve revenue collection and general economic performance of the country.

On 28th of March 2013, through a letter signed by the Treasury Cabinet Secretary Henry Rotich and then Central Bank Governor Njuguna Ndung’u, the Executive was committed to full implementation of the proposed changes to value-added tax (VAT).

Among the proposed changes to the country’s VAT structure was to do away with VAT exemption on petroleum. Parliament’s intervention saved face as the VAT proposals were put on hold for three years till 2016.
Amendments to the Finance Act 2016 on August 31st 2016 extended the exemption of the VAT on petroleum products for two years with the exemption coming to an end on September 1st 2018.

Subsequent extensions by Parliament to postpone the implementation of VAT on petroleum products among others can only be termed as symptomatic responses to the hazy economic policies pursued by the Jubilee administration.

Ascending to power following the highly divisive 2013 general elections, the Jubilee administration was out of favour with half of the Kenyan citizenry and the West. Therefore, it was out to mend fences by embarking on ambitious infrastructural projects which would ordinarily require to be highly financed either through borrowing or revenue collected.

Institutionalization of various infrastructural projects was intended to improve the administration’s political fortunes. With the desire to increase the collected revenue, the Executive engineered the move to restructure the VAT system.

Being in good books with the IMF would aid the Jubilee administration just in case Kenya’s economy was to be hit by a crisis. We should not forget that IMF and extensively the West have proved to be the chief lenders of last resort when economies of poor countries experience economic crises.

In any case, if the Kenyan economy was to be hit by an economic crisis under a Jubilee administration not in good terms with IMF, then regime change – a common foreign policy tool fashioned by the West – would possibly be sanctioned.

With the country’s public debt level running into headwinds, Kenyans are left with no choice but to pay high taxes to finance the costly mega-projects which make little economic sense, though politically sensible to the current administration.

Rationale of VAT on Petroleum Products
No rocket science is required to know whether the government is broke or not. Levying VAT on petroleum products is meant to raise more revenue for a Republic whose Executive and Legislature have failed in view of essentials of public finance.

Details captured in an IMF Country Report dated March 2018 indicate the commitment of the Kenyan government in implementing a number of policies.

Key among these policies include cutting expenditure, increasing revenue and the removal or significant modification of the interest rate caps. In regards to cutting expenditure, lower-priority capital projects are not to be financed.

Few weeks ago, Uhuru Kenyatta apparently issued an order stopping any new projects from being sanctioned with majority of Kenyans thinking it is a move meant to curb corruption. Essentially, the order is rooted in the administration’s commitment with the agreement reached by IMF.

Levying of the VAT on petroleum products is expected to generate Kshs.71 billion in revenue. Considering, however, the amount of finances lost through corruption, tax evasion and unnecessary tax holidays, then Treasury is clearly missing the boat.

Treasury expects that the revenue to be collected this financial year would amount to Kshs.1.92 trillion. At the beginning of the last financial year (2017/2018), Treasury targeted to collect Kshs.1.7 trillion in revenue before revising the estimates to Kshs.1.4 trillion. For the last five financial years, Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has never been able to achieve its targets in regards to revenue and the current financial year won’t be an exception.

Rotich’s bravado not to concede to the public’s outcry on the increase in prices of petroleum products is an indication of how Treasury is desperate to raise funds bearing in mind that grave concerns have been raised on the administration’s zeal for borrowing.

Dishonesty
Inherently, the current uproar on the fuel prices and the administration’s hell-bent nature to effect the VAT on petroleum products is a game of absolute dishonesty.

Firstly, the Executive is dishonest on this policy issue. Was it not aware about this policy that would occasion a rise in the cost of living? This is incompetency at its best.

Secondly, the Treasury chiefs are a bunch of dishonest bureaucrats. For the last five years, the country’s budgets have been characterized with massive deficits. Though revenue collected has significantly increased, it is the nature of KRA to continually miss targets, and this has raised concerns on Treasury’s fiscal approach and KRA’s inefficiency.

A 2015 joint report by the African Union and the Economic Commission for Africa pointed out that Kenya loses over Kshs.600 billion as a result of tax evasion. In six months leading to August 2018 tax evasion at the port of Mombasa, as reported, amounted to Kshs.100 billion. In a report published by Oxfam in January 2017, it is estimated that Kenya loses over Kshs.100 billion annually due to tax exemptions given to global corporations.

One should also consider that a third of the national budget is never accounted for then think about the billions of shillings lost. So, who is fooling who? The government should be busy sealing all these loopholes that lead to trillions of money being lost instead of pursuing policies that will ultimately generate unintended consequences. Treasury’s ineptness certainly means that looking at the bigger picture is a mirage.

Parliament as usual is full of dishonest individuals who are starkly corrupt and lack any intellectual capacity to prioritize weighty policy issues. Did Parliamentarians not foresee the impending rise in prices of petroleum products? Some have come out making claims on how the Treasury duped them to passing the VAT Act 2013 on the account that the country was expected to produce oil which would stabilize domestic petroleum prices.

Lack of Parliament’s independence is a factor that has incapacitated the institution from representing citizens in a dignified manner. Parliament operates under the wings of the Executive particularly for the ruling party, the Jubilee Party. Rigorous debates cannot take place under such conditions.

Voters are also to be blamed in regards to this game of dishonesty. It was pretty clear that the economic policies of the Jubilee administration were deeply flawed but this hardly convinced a significant number of voters to vote otherwise.

Elections need to be a matter of assessing policies aimed at improving the lives of the citizens. In the event that policies pursued by the ruling political formation lead to more misery than prosperity, then morally such an entity does not deserve to be voted in.

The IMF is dishonest about the austerity policies that it recommends for countries. Historically, IMF has fashioned this policy misstep which ignores the fortunes of residents of countries that they push to adopt policies that cut spending and raise taxes.

Spending may be reduced especially for the case of Kenya where public funds are largely wasted. Increasing taxes raises the cost of living but the IMF seems to be hell-bent in fronting this policy recommendation.

Implications & the Future
An increase in the prices of petroleum products is bound to trigger ripple effects across other sectors of the economy and social structure. Prices of other products will definitely go up as a result of the increase in the transportation costs. With the income earned by Kenya’s residents expected to be fairly stagnant then inflation will certainly occasion a rise in the cost of living, a diabolical economic and social outcome.

Furtherly, postponement of levying VAT on petroleum products would definitely lead to a catch-22 situation. In the event that Uhuru Kenyatta assents to the Finance Bill 2018, it would just be two years before we voice out our disappointment at the economically imprudent Jubilee administration.

Failure to implement the VAT on petroleum products, in CS Rotich’s words, will occasion difficulties in financing the country’s budget thus necessitating more borrowing or increasing the VAT rate on other products from 16% to 18%.

Either way, my hunch is that VAT will soon be levied on other non-VATable products as the Treasury desperately seeks to raise finances through taxation with the room for further borrowing fast contracting.

Politically, there will be no consequences going by the nature of majority of Kenyans who forget rather quickly. If a significant majority of the Republic’s voters would be voting on the basis of policy proposals and performance of the incumbents, perhaps the noises being made would only be grave wishes.

Voting is not enough. Constitutionally, citizens are empowered to air their concerns on issues affecting them. I long for the day when Kenyans will march on the streets en masse to demonstrate against nefarious policies pursued by government institutions.

On how not to manage the economy, CS Rotich and the Presidency offer crucial lessons for historical purposes. Running an economy depends on getting the fundamentals right. Trading-off an economy’s cost of living with poor, inefficient and punctured policies is a validation of getting it wrong on the fundamentals. The goose is cooked!

Wednesday 8 August 2018

On Kenya’s Oligarchy, Twisted Democracy & Dashed Hopes of the Third Liberation

Kenyans queuing to vote in the 2017 elections
Photo Courtesy: CNN 
A year after Kenyans took to the polls, a number of political events have occurred, and have shaped the country’s political landscape in some respects.

From nullification of the outcome of the presidential election, the repeat presidential election boycotted by Raila Odinga, the historical swearing-in of Odinga as the people’s president, the muzzling of dissenting voices by the administration of the day to the unexpected handshake, it’s been a political melodrama of sorts.

Reflecting on the pre-election and post-election happenings, Kenya comes out as a flourishing oligarchy and a failing democracy, a twisted one for that matter.

Fundamentally, a democracy is a political system characterized by a free, fair and credible electoral process. On the other hand, the electoral process in an oligarchy comes out as fraudulent, fake and crooked.

Basing on the credibility of the electoral process in the lead up to the 2018 general elections, it is correct to assert that Kenya’s trajectory towards a vibrant democracy is twisted.

Historically, Kenya’s political system, and extensively the economic system, only benefit few individuals who control the means of production and the balance of power. This is an explicit manifestation of an oligarchy.

Kenya’s pre-supposed democratic tendencies, to say the least, are far-fetched and illusionary. Politically and economically, the majority, whom democracy accords the right to call the shots, have never had their way in the country with the exception of the formation of the NARC administration and the institutionalization of the current constitutional dispensation.

An honest rumination in view of Kenya’s political and electoral malfeasance wouldn’t take place without weighty consideration of the compromised Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC), the role and influence of the Western states – the so-called masters and defenders of democratic ideals, the excessively irrational average voter, the highly deceptive public relations (PR) and political consultancy firms, and the Third Liberation whose conceptualization is fast waning.

Basically, an institution is as good or bad as the people charged with the mandate to steer it. From the family – the basic unit of social organization, a school, an organization, a football team and a government, competence is a tenet necessary for the success or failure of an entity.

In the run up to the 2018 general elections IEBC’s senior officers proved to be partisan and compromised thus jeopardizing the independence of the electoral body.

Independence of an electoral body is the foremost step in having a free, fair and credible electoral process. The independence of the IEBC is interfered with right from the appointments of the commissioners and other senior officers of the country’s electoral body.

The embattled chair of IEBC Wafula Chebukati has proven to be quite incompetent but this is not a surprise anyway given his subpar performance while being vetted by Parliament for the hot seat. He was not the best out of the other candidates and being appointed to chair the IEBC fixed him in a corner.

Other commissioners were clearly partisan and their political intentions well known. We can’t have a clean electoral process with such poisoned minds running an exercise that determines the fate of Kenyans economically, socially and politically.

Western states – the masters of impunity and double-standards – supported a corrupt regime out of geo-political and geo-economic interests. Led by the American government, they pronounced the legitimacy of an administration which they were not in favour of in 2013.

Who offers support and confers legitimacy to a regime whose rogue police officers killed and injured innocent Kenyans including harmless children?

Setting the record straight, political correctness is the language preferred by the governments of the Western states. Kenya’s case and other immoral governments across Africa being cheered on by the West is largely informed by their (Western states) intentions to counter China’s influence on the continent.

If the likes of the American, British, French and other Western governments are champions and crusaders of democracy, then it would make sense if they were not funding undemocratic regimes and toppling legitimate governments around the world.

As matter-of-factly, Western governments have never condemned the rogue and undemocratic regime in Saudi Arabia. They wreaked havoc in Afghanistan, Libya, Yemen, Syria and other nations but only as a divide and rule scheme driven by paranoia and economic interests.

Apart from the political relief offered by the West, the deception and destruction caused by the global political consultancy firms such as Cambridge Analytica should never be forgotten going forward.

The political consultancy firms are in pursuit of profits, economic capital and economic power as the political parties and formations are hell-bent in pursuit of political capital and political power. But to what extent is the price to be paid for the trade-off between business profits and political power?

Apparently, the price is costly and takes the form of a disintegrated country. These firms pursue their profits by optimizing on the structural weaknesses of a country.

For instance, in Kenya, Cambridge Analytica which was responsible for running the Jubilee Party’s political campaign ostensibly capitalized on the ethnic fault lines that are highly visible in the Kenyan society.

So far no serious step has been made in banning such firms from operating in Kenya especially in running political campaigns. This country is a joke. Pressure from various entities eventually forced Cambridge Analytica to shut down its operations.

In South Africa, PR firm Bell Pottinger, known to work for despots, was chased from the country after running racially charged campaigns especially on economic reform and the prevalent socio-economic inequalities in the country.

But unlike in Kenya where the public never protested about Cambridge Analytica’s divisive campaign, the publics in Britain and South Africa were vocal on the firms’ PR gimmicks.

Involvement of these firms in Kenya’s political space with the intention of driving narratives that are misleading and dangerous casts the country as a twisted democracy.

Embers of the Third Liberation that flamed up following the flawed electoral process flickered out as soon as the ‘handshake’ between Raila Odinga and Uhuru Kenyatta came to the fore.

Doubts have been cast on the supposed Building Bridges Initiative and yours truly is among the doubters. Judging from Kenya’s political history the ‘handshake’ is as good as any other political deal and its abandonment would not be a surprise.

Political (electoral) justice and economic justice should be the key drivers of the Third Liberation. But with political interests taking centre stage the hopes for a new Kenya are dashed.

Failure to address injustices committed in recent times and long before that will not actualize building bridges on the social, political and economic issues that divide Kenyans. Ignoring the implementation of the recommendations put forth by the Truth Justice and Reconciliation Commission (TJRC) only sets the country on a path for intensified calls for secession, massive socioeconomic inequality and electoral skullduggery in the near future.

In view of the aforementioned weighty issues, where does the Kenyan public stand? There is no hope for a better Kenya considering the dubious electoral and political decisions made by majority of members of the public.

Can the Kenyan public dislodge the oligarchs that have patronized the country’s politics and economy since the dawn of independence? This is a question of fundamental importance. But with a significant number of Kenyans voting in an unintelligent fashion and being unapologetic about their ethnic political ideologies there is no hope of Kenya transitioning to a nation.

Kenya has never been a nation. All the episodic moments of nationhood – independence, the Second Liberation, dethronement of the rogue and despotic KANU regime and promulgation of the current Constitution – involved elements of disenchantment with individuals at the centre of the government preferring to subscribe to the ideals of an oligarchy.

Let’s not pretend to pursue national unity in the spirit of the ‘handshake’ and the doctrine of accepting and moving on while escaping from addressing the country’s problems. That is not how a nation is built.

Wednesday 13 June 2018

Of Whales, Sharks, the Big Fish & the Small Fish: On Kenya’s State of Corruption

Image: Courtesy. 
The same administration, the same storyline, the same state of affairs! That is the Jubilee administration for you folks! The recent revelations of the grand looting at the National Youth Service (NYS), and at the National Cereals and Produce Board (NCPB) among other scams are a reminder of the failures and incompetence of the Jubilee administration.

I’m not engaging in a kind of a guns-blazing-no-holds-barred attack against the purported government of the majority, whose legitimacy is a knife-edge question, but undertaking an almost saintly act of expressing my disenchantment regarding the theft of public funds and immorality at the heart of government institutions.

It is immoral to embezzle resources that belong to the public. For the last five years, there is no doubt whatsoever that the Jubilee administration has presided over world class corruption and unrivalled immorality.

Recently, the Principal Secretary of the Interior Ministry, Karanja Kibicho, admitted that in the last five years corruption has gone up by 240%. One wonders how such public theft occurs while no individuals can be held accountable.

Normally, an incident of theft requires an agent before it is sanctioned and in due course materializes. This raises a fundamental concern in regards to why perpetrators of these scams especially under the Jubilee administration are yet to be jailed. Does it mean that corruption involving government agencies involves faceless individuals?

Kenya, under the rule of the Jubilee administration is a total joke, and as a matter of fact it can hardly be thought of as a country let alone a nation. And to set the record straight, Kenya cannot be thought of as a nation.

In fact, Kenya has only flirted with the state of nationhood thrice: the first time at the dawn of independence; the second time in 2002/2003 when NARC took over; and in 2010 following the promulgation of the current constitution.

Going by the political definition of the term ‘country’, Kenya does not qualify as one because of the immorality sanctioned by government officers in the form of plundering resources. Thus, Kenya is a den of corruption and a haven to the corrupt. This is the major reason why the proceeds from the economy only benefit a few individuals and not the majority.

Yes to Vice, No to Virtue
Profiting from vice is the order of the day in Kenya and this is an indication of a society characterized by systemic failure. The high affinity to vice than virtue in Kenya is not just a black spot for the public sector as the private sector is equally corrupt.

From the so-called whales, sharks, the big fish to the small fish of the rungs of the Kenyan society, the vice of corruption rules; its tentacles are widely spread and the culture is deeply entrenched.

Corruption has evolved over the years and it has become a national culture. Even with a constitution that lays a lot of emphasis on integrity, efforts to de-institutionalize the culture of corruption have proven to be futile.

It is nonsensical to have a government that is dominated with robber barons, individuals whose main motive is to speculate how they can orchestrate looting of public resources and from where.

We should not forget that by the term government reference is drawn to the national government and the county governments including their various arms. For instance, at the national level we have the Executive, Parliament and Judiciary. At the county level, we have the county assemblies and the county executives.

Sadly, these organs are dominated by people who are short of character, and in any case they would hardly meet the threshold of occupying state offices in countries or nations that are serious democracies and where integrity is highly regarded.

But, with a saintly reflection it is clear that citizens have given consent to the culture of corruption to permeate in the Republic. Look, majority of the citizens – those eligible to vote – are either compromised and vote for the wrong people or do not vote at all hence allowing the corrupt to be elected in office.

Kenya began its post-independence journey on a path that can be described as evil, highly immoral and certainly vicious. The Jomo Kenyatta-led administration was full of individuals whose desire was to amass wealth at the expense of fighting poverty, disease and ignorance – the main challenges that Kenyans faced at the dawn of independence.

Unfortunately, the three challenges still bedevil the Republic primarily due to corruption that has been handed down in ceremonious fashion from the Jomo Kenyatta regime, to the perpetually corrupt Moi regime, to the Kibaki administration and to the current rogue and fundamentally corrupt Jubilee administration.

Dealing with corruption in the Republic calls for not only upholding the rule of law but also advocating for a culture change in the various levels and classes of the Kenyan society. This means in essence that the social aspects need to be looked at to ensure that Kenyans begin to endear themselves to virtue and not vice.

For instance, the role of the family in the socialization and enculturation process of an individual needs to be revisited. Nowadays, the family is a neglected institution that no longer imparts the socially approved morals like integrity and being mindful of others’ welfare. The family has instead degenerated into an entity where greed is hatched, preached and practiced.

Additionally, the education system has failed to teach learners about morality and integrity. How do we expect students and pupils who steal exams to be the yardsticks of morality in the Republic? And hopelessly, teachers and parents facilitate the culture of cheating in examinations. Is the present and future of Kenya not doomed?

On the Price of Corruption
Corruption is a commodity and just like other valuable products, it has a price and a market determined by the forces of demand and supply.

Normally, the production of a commodity and distribution are determined by a set of incentives. Incentives motivate the producers to produce commodities and enable traders to engage in trading activities. For instance, the primary incentive for capitalists is to make profits.

Since corruption is a commodity, its value is attached to the various socio-economic classes that exist in Kenya with each class engaging in corruption activities it can easily afford. The rich – those with means – can easily afford to engage in corruption in the upper echelons of government. The poor – the have nots, the scum of the Kenyan society – and the hoi polloi can afford to pay for corruption that takes place at the lower levels of the Republic’s socio-economic and political strata.

The bottom line, however, is that each social and economic class can afford to pay for corruption depending on the socio-economic stratification, just like in a normal product market where the rich can afford purchasing luxurious commodities and the poor can afford buying low quality sometimes cheap counterfeit goods.

Thence, the price of corruption is too low in Kenya in that it can easily be afforded by majority of the citizens whether one is looting billions from state institutions or paying a fifty shilling bribe for easier access to public services.

A vicious fight against corruption in the Republic, therefore, requires that this vice be made unaffordable. In essence, this calls for the cost of engaging in corruption to be increased, and as a result eliminate the incentives that facilitate graft to take place.

In increasing the cost of engaging in corruption and subsequently its price, it implies that punitive measures such as death sentence should be experimented and eventually instituted.

Just like a typical economy with extractive institutions where inequality between the poor and the rich is massive - with the rich getting away with whatever economic benefit as the have nots hope for the better – the legal system in Kenya is rogue and unequal with the whales, the sharks and the big fish that engage in corruption going scot free as the small fish literally face the full force of the law. This is outright subversion of the rule of law.

As matter-of-factly, the Jubilee administration is busy engaging in mere publicity stunts of arresting the NYS scandal suspects and talking tough as usual while the politicians, and other wheeler-dealers in government circles who choreograph the looting are yet to be prosecuted.

What happened to the first NYS scandal investigations? The Executive, Parliament and the Judiciary owe the tax payers an explanation on this.

By the way, in the month of May 2018 a clerk at the Kibera Huduma Centre was sentenced to two years in jail and fined Kshs. 500,000 for taking a bribe of Kshs. 2,500. This clerk is a small fish. What about the big fish, the whales and the sharks of the NYS scandals, the NCPB looting, and other scams engineered under the watch of the Jubilee administration?

Ours is not a country; it is a den of thieves and a haven for the robber barons and the irredeemably corrupt.