Magigi wrote:...Well, the parliament has passed this bill and Baba Jimmy as usual will take time as he listens to hapa na pale to decide whether to append his signature or not. One argument I have read in the DN is that traders will move to selling other commodities that have no price controls and this will create shortage of the controlled commodities...na mimi nauliza, kwa lexample, for those who sell fuel...will they start sellling water!!! Shenzi argument!!!!
@Magigi: petrol dealers will stop selling fuel; sell the stations and do something else with the money.
Anyway; I liked the way Jaindi Kisero summed it: "A foolish idea whose time has passed"
One the biggest problems in Kenya is our short memory. A crook steals our billions. Goes into hibernation; then comes out and bribes us to vote for him again...and we do!
I vividly remember the days when the price of sugar was controlled at Sh4.45 per kg. The local chief would take charge of the selling in the shops that had the commodity.
People would queue for several hours waiting for the chief to finish attacking the chang'aa dens and then come and supervise the selling of sugar.
BTW; the commodity would be delivered to only one shop in my town (Thika) once a month. Other traders wouldn't stock it because the profit margin was too small.
Same thing with cement. Only one shop in the whole town stocked it!
A few shops would get controlled commodities through the back door and sell them at "market" prices. E.g., sugar would be sold at Sh10 per kg; cement Sh100 instead of sh57.85.
And this is where these silly MPs want to take us back to?
Why have a cheap commodity which isn't available?
If I were Kibaki, I would reject that bill in the interest of the survival of the nation.
Still; it is interesting that Kibaki was the one who perfected the price control philosophy when he was minister for finance.
Let's wait to see whether he has changed.
Nothing is real unless it can be named; nothing has value unless it can be sold; money is worthless unless you spend it.