I have given you example of countries that became developed through service sector and all I have heard is that they were small. I don't know how small. Kenya small? or China small? or US small? Sychelles big or Singapor big?
Actually if you have been reading, you should have noted that many the objections to your examples (Estonia and Mauritius) were about more than just size. Faced with the facts on those, you changed from how Kenya will follow the "
many examples of countries that have moved to developed word by focusing solely on services" to how Kenya will now be the "
rare exception". It's all up there.
On size: Seychelles is a country of
97,000 people. That is an example of "small". Very small. Too small to be used as any sort of model for a country like Kenya.
As for Moi university futile attempt to jumpstart textile manufacturing and try copy Bangladesh - I am not suprised they didn't go anywhere.
Let's separate the two things:
(1) Since you brought up Bangladesh, it was pointed out to you that according to GoK itself, Kenya cannot match that country in textiles, even though the latter has higher costs. Why is that?
(2) the Moi university involvement simply shows how clueless the government is in such matters and also, again, exposes the
kula nyama approach.