Pundit, Robina, Terminator, et. al:
A lot on interesting observations and comments. "To be continued", as I must go to sleep ... But for now: We can have debates on what we should be doing; in fact, we could even agree on most of that. To my mind the serious questions are about why we aren't doing whatever, when do we plan to start the doing, how to do the doing, etc. Example (Robina):
Now, smart manufacturing aka value addition is not advanced to industrial manufacturing level. Since we have raw materials (agric, metals, etc) it requires processing plants to purify coffee, make cod liver oil from fish, etc. Baby step Instead of exporting pure hides and skins that we do at present. Doing this efficiently will a)increase revenues without being uncompetitive to market b)fulfill local demand and cut import bill.
So, where are we with respect to such basic "smart manufacturing"? And where are the signs that we are about to make a "dramatic" change? (Keep in mind that Terminator would have us leap from animal skins to semiconductors )
Very well. "Industrialization" is conflated with manufacturing. It means modernization. We could have steel as well as weetabix or computer factories. The bottom-line is sufficient incomes to contain poverty and prosper. What is the best path for development i.e. expansion/growth, you ask. Are we really on the right path?
The what - Vision 2030 suffices. Plans evolve so 2000 to 2020... 2060 is our equivalent of Chinese 5-Year Plans.
The doing - Vision 2030 Delivery Board has the best of breed in James Mwangi, Kibatis and the likes. The laptop-for-kids, Tana River* power plant, irrigation schemes, SGR, etc are steered by Vision 2030 boards such as the IT Authority. We can argue the efficacies but most state programs are reading from the agreed script with technocrats/PSs borrowing from these policy bodies.
Our strength is we have a working plan. Our weakness is execution. There are opportunities (global pool of expertise, technologies, capital) and threats (competition, corruption, etc). Pundit is right to say manufacturing should grow at 20-30% to catch up. This
high, consistent growth is infact mandatory if the industrial dreams in Vision 2030 are to be realized. The roadmap says as much.