GDP growth is on the upswing across East
Africa. Life expectancy is rising again. But is prosperity irreversible and
inevitable?
Maternal, new born and infant mortality is
declining rapidly. Life expectancy in Kenya is now estimated at about 63 years.
Enrollment in primary school remains high. Student numbers in secondary and
university level is surging. Interest and investment in technical and
vocational education is gathering momentum.
Access to electricity is high and rising,
thanks to massive expansion of the national grid and the falling cost of solar
power. Significant improvements in major trunk roads have cut travel time
between far flung villages and cities. The proliferation mobile telephony has
revolutionized access to information and financial services.
Overall, life has improved for the majority
of East Africans. But there is still so much to do. Rapid expansion of access
to education, from primary to university level, has come at the expense of
quality. About a third of children finishing primary school do not possess
requisite levels of literacy or numeracy. Graduates from our universities are
mostly functionally illiterate.
According to the Kenya Medical
Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union, the doctor patient ratio stands
at about 1 to 17,000, against the WHO ratio of 1 to 1,000. Our schools are
inadequately staffed. Agricultural extension services have collapsed.
Smallholder farm productivity is in free fall. Pockets of hunger and chronic
malnutrition still exist and will deprive our economies of vital human
capital.
The rate of urbanization has outpaced the
capacity of our cities to plan and provide basic services such as housing,
water and sanitation. About 80 percent of the residents of Dar es Salaam live
in unplanned settlements. According to the World Bank Kampala could become a
mega slum in less than 10 years. The city of Nairobi cannot provide clean water
for its residents.
The path to sustained prosperity is neither
certain nor inevitable. Our progress remains fragile.
The challenges
presented by climate change, intense competition for and degradation of water,
vegetation and soil resources, unequal distribution of growth, conflict and
failing global leadership are complex, entwined and unprecedented on a global
scale.
Across East Africa, Debt levels are beginning
to surge again. Commodity prices are in decline. Traditional job intensive
sectors such as manufacturing and agriculture continue to defy growth.
Moreover, the youth bulge, rapid and
unplanned urbanization, anemic public sector governance, feeble civil society,
jobless growth and a looming risk of violent extremism make more complex our challenges.
New ideas and innovations in governance, in
public and private sector, must emerge to deal with the challenges that
confront us. Grappling with these challenges will depend, imagination and
creativity, cooperation and sacrifice from all of us.
We can’t afford the politics of rancor and
division. Politics and governance must be about solving our most urgent
challenges. Moreover, it’s not okay for citizens to stand pat and blame
politics and government for everything that is wrong. We the people must live
up to the scared obligation of citizenship – enlightened engagement.
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