BPOs like Kencall have been around so this is not entirely new, just going mainstream. Availability of highspeed internet CHEAPLY is key here.
At least this guy is upto something.
And
what might that something be? I have read that article and also gone through the website
http://ajiradigital.go.ke/ and I can't tell.
- For example, he speaks of trainers training trainers training trainers ... quickly reaching 1 million, and one can indeed apply at the website to be trainer. Except that it's unpaid work, which unlikely to attract anyone; but it is on that basis that the CS states that "
We are making it easier, ensuring there will be quality workers available".
- There is a "
Find Work" link that leads to some links that anyone using Google to find such work can readily find on their own (and find more and better of) and a few links that are useless.
- Similarly there is a "
Resources" link that leads to pointers to the obvious or the useless.
The library at my local community centre actually has a much better website for the unemployed, and it has very few resources for that: just one guy who,
volunteering 2 hrs per week!, scans the web and collects information. But in Kenya, this
Ajira joke is what a cabinet talks about as some great national initiative?!?
BPO?!? That's very, very funny.
Go through the website; that will take all of 5 minutes, which is probably the time it took to put it together!.The guy talks as though all this going to lead to substantial employment for serious numbers of Kenyans and how they are starting with 40,000 and plan to reach 1 million. But his 40,000 are just people who have registered some place; there is nothing to suggest that they are finding gainful work or even qualified to do much. It's pretty much like an Unemployment Service measuring success in addressing unemployment by counting how many people it has registered as needy.
Every so often, while trying to watch something on Youtube, I come across an ad from a guy who's selling "the laptop lifestyle". One is shown the guy's fancy house, cars, beautiful girlfriends ... and told it can all be done from a laptop--wherever, whenever, however one pleases .... for the free videos (worth $99.95) just click on the link below and provide your credit card details (to cover shipping and handling of $3.95). The CS seems to be their kind of guy; as he puts it, in their language:
You don't have to work so many hours; you can work four hours a day and still earn enough and then be able to do other things. It gives people even more freedom.
And then there are the "serious" types---academics etc.---who have plenty to say on things like "the future of work". The CS sounds like he has swallowed whole all of that. Sample this:
In the past, people would go to a specific office, work there, close and go home.
Actually, right now--and even in the most "digitally advanced" places---that how most people still work, if they have a decent job. (Replace the CS's
telling "office" with "work place" or whatever.) Those are the kind of jobs that people are studying hard to get or working hard to keep. Those are the jobs that Kenyans bribe for.
Here's another funny one:
If it is an accounting person you need, you probably need them for just the last week of the month, but because of the current structures, you pay them for the whole month.
Of course! That's when people get paid and there's money to make anything happen! The CS showing his Kenyan end-of-the-month mentality.
In some cases, the CS makes statements whose implications are actually quite staggering but which has obviously not thought about:. Here's one:
Today, some network operators provide unlimited internet for about Sh35 a day. A bottle of water is about Sh50.
(I won't get into what "unlimited internet" means in Kenya.)
He is trying to convey the idea that unlimited network is quite cheap. But:
- That is around Sh. 1,000 per month, which is around 10% o the average monthly wage!
- Bottled water is some thing that those who ca afford it buy because running tap water is either unavailable or likely to cause cholera. A real issue.
Given the way things are going with Konza City---I'm told the
Silicon Savanah is Africa's answer to
Silicon Valley---perhaps it will be all virtual: people working just a few hours per day and then having the freedom to enjoy the digital lifestyle (as seen on TV).