Folks, let's consider this again. The Cabinet Secretary has the audacity to declare in the open that the #NHIF will not pay treatment costs emerging from Covid-19 illness.
And this declaration is a repudiation of a contract between the contributors and the NHIF, without telling payers whether they can relocate.
It is such a serious issue because it says that you will be compelled to pay and someone else will unilaterally decide what coverage will be provided.
So my question to those who say such interesting empty phrases as "healthcare shouldn't be privatized" is, What options are we left with?
Finally, if a private insurer unilaterally truncated the coverage for it's clients, methinks we would be entitled to sue it. And I say this knowing the private insurance firms deliberately manipulate records and lie on billing.
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Folks, hypocrisy is a legislator elected under the Jubilee Party standing on a podium in November 2020 raising alarm about public debt in Kenya. Sir, you caused this damage five years ago when you approved everything your twin bosses (Laurel and Hardy) wanted to buy.
2. And then went ahead to try and weaponized the budget by trying to neutralize independent offices and Chapter 15 commissions, starting with @OAG_Kenya
3. We understand that you may be driven now by either good faith or political expediency to oppose the BBI, but don't contaminate the public square with the mendacious claim that the dangers of irresponsible borrowing have just become obvious.
Folks, while I do not know how to interpret the politics of it, the evidence of procurement fraud in Kenya at both the national and county governments is so abundant that the failure to secure convictions is because both the ODPP and EACC aiming to miss.
For some reason, both offices are busy pulling up new evidence to start prosecutions but aiming most of it at county governments. That's all in order because the prosecution has to start and continue at both levels of government.
Any governor who is interested only to get public services running and and not dipping hands into the public purse, must consider privatizing the payroll and procurement functions. Both are a minefield and few state departments will escape any proper scrutiny.
Folks, Australia is seeing the first recession in 30 years and there's a full generation of working citizens who have never experienced one. This matters for the next time someone tells you about the superior economic management of "Benevolent Autocrats".
Australia is also a democracy and has solid institutions in both the public and private sectors. To state it differently, its politics and economy are liberalized.
Back to Kenya, the people who are wont to claim that "Benevolent Autocrats" create faster economic development have a direct structural approach to public affairs. In the main, they tend to be engineers and some lawyers who have benefited immensely from state largesse.
Folks, I have made a list of public funded organizations that I think represent no value for public money. The taxpayer would be no worse if they were closed. Sema KEMSA!
The list that we have compiled from the records published by the inspectorate of State corporations shows that there are 210 parastatals and state corporations in Kenya.
Of these, the Ministry of Defence has authority over 1 corporation under its supervision, The Kenya Ordinance, and Factories Corporation while the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology oversees 45 state corporations that include the public universities.
I understand that CS Magoha is under public pressure to reopen schools promptly and therefore announces an impractical approach to show that physical distancing will be maintained in schools. Not reasonable. 1/N
The mean number if students per primary school in Kenya is 312 and 315 respectively for primary and high schools respectively. 2/N
As this chart by @IEAKenya shows, the 15 pupils per class policy means that every primary and high school will need to have a total of 16 classes minimum. 3/N
Folks, consider yourself intelligent but lacking wisdom and discernment if you are enamoured by a legislator's recent claim that public debt in Kenya is the biggest policy issue today.
That's been an issue for five years so that declaration comes from someone trying to bolt the door after the horse left long ago.
Public budget estimates in 2017/18 had a deficit of ~Ksh. 800B and they couldn't see that?