It is a cost of infrastructure development at all costs. We needed infrastructure and infrastructure we go. Now we should see the magic bullet that people were talking about of how infrastructure construction projects can create a boom.. so far we have not seen the 1.5 billion.. may be the multiplier is being eaten by the fact everything other than some land buying and labor was outsourced.. Could the model that worked for America in the 1930 and 45s could have worked because the projects consumed American steel, cement, used American labor and funded by Americans loans?
Now let us build Lapset and see .. Economists live for the long run.. Some said in the long run we are dead.. may be we have to dead for this success to be apparent
I think we need better infrastructure. Badly. And I'm all for it. But I am yet to be persuaded that building things like the SGR is the way to go about it. Consider this:
- The World Bank was willing to support the much cheaper project of refurbishing the the current "narrow gauge" line. We said, "no, thank you; w want brand new shit".
- The Japanese consultant on the EAC's "Master Plan" had this to say: (a) when your spanking new line is ready, the maximum speeds will be lower than what we have on most of our refurbished "narrow gauge" lines that are much older than yours, (b) even with your current lines you could get better speeds just by improving the signalling, and (c) you folks need to move away from "must have new" and work on improving your maintenance culture.
One may take whatever view one wishes on all that, but here's what I think should not be dismissed:
GoK has never, ever given any serious presentation on the economic viability of the SGR. What has been dished out has been vague and baseless hand-waving. Snake-oil pouring as if to replenish Lake Nakuru. 1.5% of this, 2.5 of that, savings here, whatever there. The current "introductory rates" for cargo and "promotional rates" for passengers ... what is the economic basis?***
Money to be made on the SGR? Definitely. Some of it has already been made; the rest will be in the "something small". How any of that will help with loan repayments is not clear. Not that Kung Fu cares: insurance on the loans had to be paid before Day 1 of start-of-construction.
LAPSSET? Good idea .... because people are really keen to do exactly what in places like South Sudan? The port stuff will go ahead because the Japanese are really keen on it---and, by the way, those folks do a lot for Kenya and spend a lot of their money here without bringing in so many of their people and so much or their material, or getting people to jerk off over their national colours. Some of the intra-Kenya road stuff too will go ahead, because the World Bank and the likes have already made the commitments. Kenyans making money there? Yes, but nothing to do with actual construction of anything.
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*** I believe that for the latter, H. E. President Uhuru did a Moi-thing and just declared that "it shall now be this", but still just "promotional". I also note the consultant's recommendation that the rates start low to lure in the suckers. And ....