eboomerang wrote:While the ideas may be wonderful, there is a great deal of simplicity and lack of proper analysis to really show the benefits these projects will create.
Instead of throwing some "big" figures at us, why not provide proper documentation or create a forum where you take people through the various parts of the business model these projects are going to follow. When are the projects expected to break even? what about a cost-benefit analysis? Even some simple SWOT analysis would be more helpful than political rhetoric.Watch the clip... @ eboomerang,
I will start responding to your first point, the blue.What do you mean simplicity? Expound.
Lack of proper analysis to show to show the benefits? I don't understand. What analysis? All i know, most of the gov'ts world over,they don't "explain" themselves about projects they are undertaking. They look at the "need" of essential structures. Profit is not a factor.
The port will bring immense benefits. Have you ever brought a shipment thru' mombasa? I do every month and its a nightmare.With S.Sudan up n running,with its huge oil reserves and its wars with Khartoum,a Kenya Port is the only feasible port for them. With petrol dollars, they will have huge imports/exports. Lamu port/kenya stands to benefit enormously.
The rail,well, have you tried getting stuff to Juba? I have, once every two months. The transport cost from here[Kenya] to Juba sometimes is same as the buying cost. No regular freighters. With the rail and the port, i won't have to bring stuff from Mombasa,on to Uganda before it lands in Juba. Just do the Maths, the savings.
Currently,Kenya-Ethiopia biz volume is negligible,the rail will help open up that region,more economic opportunities.
The pipeline,well they got the oil and they will shoulder the burden of building it. Last i checked,Kenyan cars run on fossil fuels.
On to the second color,green. Did i read documentation? Forum? You mean gov't give documentation or call a forum for guys like you and me? Come on,get serious. What do you mean business model? Give examples,2 will be enough. The people/corporations that matter to such a project are the ones the gov't will bother contacting. Not you and me. That's how it is with gov'ts world over. When the Mombasa-Uganda railway line was being built, was there such fora? Documentation?
And yeah, the figures for
Lamu are "BIG" coz they are.
Finally to the reds, break even? Cba? Swot analysis? When the gov't is building a bridge, where a bridge HAS to be build,profit is not the objective. Providing infrastructure to its citizens is the objective. Again, that Mombasa-Uganda railway line, when was it to break even? Of course the cost and benefits of whatever undertaking MUST be considered,the benefits have to be more than the costs. But for a gov't, that's so different as compared to a private sector project. Think of gov't schools,roads, bridges etc,when do they break-even? Does that mean the costs out-weigh the benefits? I also don't think the gov't will bother trying to make people "understand" its projects. Those who can and want to see the picture,will. They won't wait to be spoon-fed.
But then again: Definition of a boomerang "
something, as a scheme or argument, that does injury to the originator.".