But at best public sector is merely 30 percent of GDP - about 20 percent in taxes and AIA - therefore private sectors and indiviudals still have 70 percent. In places like Ethiopia - it's opposite. In Nordic - it's almost 50-50.
So how can public sector that is not even 30 percent - affect private sector growth? Even if it's all stolen? You pay taxes - but you retain a 70 percent of the pie
Naturally public sector will never be optimal - it's based on non-profit model - sociliasm or communism - it's reason why we build roads or railways using public sector? - if we looked at profit - we would never build it.
I dont understand why Ndii has no issue with social investment in education - now well going into 6B dollars annual - but when we spend 6b dollars to build railway, roads and such - we bring private sector metrics in?What does public sector owes private sector - simple - macro-economics - and they are great on paper - inflation has been 4-5 percent - base rate is 7 percent - interest rate post capping is 12 percent - yes gov is borrowing at 12 percent too - and that is probably the only problem I blame Mlevi and Yattani.Gov should stop borrowing from banks - and find means to borrow or sell it's assets - until the economy re-balance.
Otherwise I do not see any problem with any infrastructure - even idle one like Isiolo or Lamu - they are not meant to make profit. Even idle power - the sunken cost to get the line - will only be done once and we have ticked that box. Once people move into those houses or get money - they will lit it up.
Public sector can never be profit or short term driven.
That's a warped economic argument. Its not like its manna from heaven, money has to be generated to fund public investment. Then there's opportunity cost, allocation of scarce resources and consequences is what determines economic outcomes.
The outcome doesn't have to be necessarily monetary, the expansion of electricity for example ended up with about 1m idle connections and also raised cost for the rest of the consumers.
Infrastructure has to be commensurate with the level of development (economic output). We have infrastructure deficit especially areas that are under-served, not mega projects.