#OutToLunch: 2021 an eventful year that we can use to create real change

#OutToLunch: 2021: an eventful year that we can use to create real change

By Denis Jjuuko

In almost about two weeks, the year 2021 will close. It has been an eventful yet forgettable year.

Covid-19 accelerated our lack of preparedness and killed many of our people. Like many people, I am struggling to delete mobile numbers of friends and relatives that passed away.

Ugandan children continue to roam streets and village paths with many not expected to go back to school again. Some children have become parents of children. A lost generation awaits us. I read somewhere that we are the only country in the world with the longest shutdown of schools due to Covid-19.

A fly on the wall tells me that the fat cats took their children to schools abroad as they advocated for increased school shutdown in Uganda. Those abroad educated children can’t ‘eat and finish’ this country. A fair shot at life for everyone should be our priority.

I hope that we have used this time to refine our curriculum. The more poorly educated the youth are, the more likely they will become radicalized so that they can strap bombs on their bodies in return for some promised heavenly goodies! Lacking skills will only make them vulnerable. Like Covid-19 has taught us, the world will be for those who have some skills.

However, many teachers will most likely not return to the classroom. They have found solace elsewhere and with uncertainties as new Covid-19 variants such as Omicron emerge, many will keep away. Already, sub-Saharan Africa had a 10 million shortage of teachers according to a detailed report on secondary education by the Mastercard Foundation. And that was before Covid-19. What numbers are we looking at today?

In Uganda, salary increments for teachers have been promised to only those teaching science subjects. Sciences alone can’t develop a country. Arts are as important. However, whether arts or science, there is need to skill the teachers too to be able to teach stuff that are necessary in the 21st century. Some of these things like sending an email look basic but I have met teachers in this country who can’t send one.

With appropriate 21st century education, Africa will create decent jobs for its young people majority of whom will have to survive on skills that aren’t being taught in most schools today.

One of the challenges for Africa is its inability to create almost anything. African policymakers have been seen on television imploring the West for equity distribution of vaccines. Two years since the breakout of Covid-19, we are the only continent where we are depending on others for anything.

We have had malaria for generations and we haven’t done anything in that regard too. Once the malaria vaccine comes out, we will quickly blame the West for hoarding them as they surely will. Of course there are some injustices that we can quickly point out such as colonialism like most politicians do, but with all the challenges we have, we have been independent for six decades on average.

The best way to solve the challenges we face is by looking at what we can do instead of blaming others. In the same period, countries like the United Arab Emirates have tremendously transformed as we regressed. It isn’t about natural resources at all because we are more endowed than UAE.

It is about our focus or the lack of it. Today, African policymakers are buying condos in Dubai. During this festive break, many alongside their relatives will be happy to take selfies in the Dubai desert admiring stuff they have the ability to create at home.

Agriculture, which everyone touts as the sector where Africa has potential is still practiced in the same way as it was 200 years ago. Look at the dairy sector as an example. During the wet season, the farmgate price of a litre of milk drops by more than half, creating more misery for the farmer. The price of inputs doesn’t go down.

We haven’t learned to add value. Our great grandparents not as educated as we are and without the Internet made ghee and such other stuff. We haven’t even capitalized on that to make ghee from Uganda such a huge product.

We import more food as a continent than we export. Our matoke rots in the garden during the harvest season. Plans to make a powder out of it seem not to have progressed. Hopefully our new-year resolutions will lead to some real impact.

djjuuko@gmail.com

The writer is a communication and visibility consultant.

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OutToLunch: African Union could help national airlines struggling to fly

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#OutToLunch: Some of the big bets for 2026

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#OutToLunch: How Uganda’s next president could easily reduce the housing deficit

By Denis Jjuuko It is not uncommon to find a social media post in Uganda regarding the price of land or property being shared many times. The argument is that land prices are extremely high especially around Kampala and in many major cities or towns across the country. With an ever-increasing population and poor infrastructure and services a few kilometres outside these major urban centres, it shouldn’t be entirely surprising that land is expensive. I have always given an example of Mpigi town, which is nearer to Kampala than Entebbe but a difficult place to commute due to poor infrastructure. Yet with the Entebbe expressway or even the old road, Entebbe is an easier place to access. So, land prices around Entebbe will always be high as not many people would make Mpigi their area of residence while working in Kampala. That though will change when the Kampala-Mpigi Expressway is complete. However, construction of infrastructure such as expressways in Uganda takes a very long time leading to people crowding around the urban areas where it is easier to commute to their workplaces and services such as hospitals and schools are better. This increases pressures on land for housing purposes in urban areas. And as the population grows, land, an inelastic resource becomes more expensive. Many young people end up struggling to build houses. With the current housing shortage said to be over 2.4 million units in Uganda, poor infrastructure and services and an ever increasing population, the price of land will only continue to rise unless the government does something. And that wouldn’t be nationalizing land like some people urge whenever there are delays in executing infrastructure projects or when the price of land is seen as a hindrance to young people owning houses. Government must realize that the most valuable asset the majority of Ugandans will ever own is a house. Once people own property, they wouldn’t want to create so much chaos that could lead to destruction. Empowering young people to own houses should therefore be in the government’s best interests. Since land in Uganda for housing is largely owned by private entities or communities who determine its cost without any guiding principles, government could create a land bank from which individuals could buy land or a house. How would this work? And since we are going to the polls next week, the country’s next president has his work well cut out. In urban areas like greater Kampala, government could buy large tracts of land in Mukono, Mpigi, Mityana and Luweero and demarcate it for planned housing estates similar with what private land dealers do but a bit better. Land would be divided into small pieces with architectural plans drawn by leading experts. Schools, recreation, and health facilities would be planned. The government would then sell the land at a rate lower than the private sector. Nobody would be allowed to deviate from the architectural plan. If you bought in an area with bungalow houses, you build the exact bungalow. If you bought in an area for storied villas, you build a storied villa as per the architectural plan. Each person or legally married couple would be allowed to buy only one plot and you can’t sell it to another person at any rate. If a buyer prefers to sell, he sells it back to the government at the price he bought it. This would protect the land from speculators who buy, hoard and then sell at an exorbitant price. Because the cost of building a house with a given architectural plan is easy to establish, banks would only rent a certain amount of money. Banks willing to lend the money would not give it to the individual as is usually the case, rather a prequalified construction company that can deliver the house within the established cost of building it with a capped interest rate or profit. This is how Islamic banking works and therefore not a novel idea that is difficult to implement. Should a person fail to pay, the government buys it from the bank at the set amount and then sells it to somebody else. People could pay in installments over a given period. Monthly deductions could be made to salaried workers such as civil servants interested. The government can then construct roads and expressways to those areas as many people would be living in these housing estates. Public transport, schools and health facilities would be prioritized. More young people would end up owning houses and therefore a huge stake in their country and ministry of urban planning would have something big to deliver. The price of land for housing would plummet too enabling more people to own houses. The writer is a communication and visibility consultant. djjuuko@gmail.com

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