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Let millionaires lift poor Kenyans out of poverty
Kenya just held the under 35 multi-millionaire economic conference displaying some of the young and brilliant minds who have braved the odds to achieve what has never been seen in this part of the world.
Waste dumped at Dandora. The rich in Kenya can invest in sanitation projects to help the poor.
Stories about their journey to riches were nothing short of dazzling. Their presence in practically every sector of the Kenyan economy; commodities, real estate, construction, logistics, telecoms, tech, services, transport, energy, agriculture, manufacturing, recycling, private equity and banking, shows a high level of shrewdness and tenacity—the two principal ingredients that define success in business.
Official data shows that Kenya has less than 9,000 documented millionaires controlling nearly two-thirds of the GDP. Going public by such individuals therefore often appears to present damning evidence of growing inequality between the haves and the have-nots, posing the danger of social friction.
With such a small group controlling so much in an economy where more than a third live in abject poverty there is always the danger of social disharmony that is specific to Kenya, but has bedevilled all societies with similar distribution of economic resources.
Economists have generated historical data showing that extreme inequality is a threat to social, economic and political stability.
History tells us that much of the equality is the product of capitalism —the system that is hinged on competing in free markets. It is the system by which the super-wealthy of the world have arisen.
Yet, it is also the system by which millions have found themselves at the bottom of the pyramid—among the poorest of the world.
Capitalism has been blamed for the runaway disparity between the rich and the poor and has been vilified as system that fleeces the masses to enrich a few even as it degrades the environmental, abuse of human rights and the emergence of a severely individualistic society.
The concern shared not only by the experts is that, as the number of home-grown super-rich increases and their control of the economy widens, there is an imminent risk of social, political and economic unrest.
How such massive control of wealth impacts on politics of the day also remains suspect. This fact cannot be under-estimated. With wealth comes influence and with influence comes power. Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
This is what the common man fears the most.
These sentiments though valid, only represent one side of the coin. There is need to look at the opposing arguments that this group of the super-rich actually create opportunity that is needed to change the lives of ordinary people and lift them out of poverty.
It is important to note that economic inequality in Kenyan is not a recent phenomenon. It dates back to the colonial times when the colonialists pushed people out of agriculturally productive land and settled there.
Today, many more drivers of economic inequality have emerged to deepen the canyon between the have and the have-nots. It is, however, important to note that these factors have absolutely nothing to do with the rich getting richer.
Gender discrimination, HIV&Aids, ethnically motivated politics all have a role to play in the emergence and persistence of inequality where the poor have remained hopeless.
Africa, its leaders must invest more in agriculture
Judging from the daily outpouring of commentary, opinions and reports, you would think that there were two African continents.
One of them is the new land of opportunity, with seven of the world’s 10 fastest growing economies, offering limitless possibilities to investors.
There is, however, this other image: a starving and hopeless continent, corrupt and prey to foreign exploiters.
As Africans, we are tired of caricatures. But we are also tired of waiting. Waiting to be led toward the one Africa we all want: the Africa that can and should be.
We know the real Africa, filled with possibilities, dignity and opportunities, able to face its challenges and solve them from within. Never has the time been more right for us to finally realise our full potential. It is within our grasp.
As a scientist, I am always interested in facts. Africa is a land rich in resources, which has enjoyed some of the highest economic growth rates on the planet. It is home to 200 million people between the ages of 15 and 24. And it has seen foreign direct investment triple over the past decade.
As the head of an institution whose business is investing in rural people, I know that you also need vision and imagination. At the International Fund for Agricultural Development, we have banked on the poorest, most marginalised people in the world.
More than 10 years have passed since the Maputo Declaration, in which African leaders committed to allocating at least 10 per cent of national budgets to agriculture and rural development – key sectors in the drive to cut poverty, build inclusive growth and strengthen food security and nutrition.
Today, just seven countries have fulfilled the Maputo commitment consistently, while some others have made steps in the right direction. Ten years is a long time to wait. In less time, I have seen projects turn desert into farmland.
In Malabo, Equatorial Guinea, during the 23rd African Union summit, I will join African leaders, who will gather to discuss this year’s focus on agriculture and food security. This is my call: Don’t just promise development, deliver it, make it happen now. Make real, concrete progress toward investment that reaches all Africans.
BIGGEST RESOURCE
Our biggest resource is our people. To squander this is worse than wasteful. If we don’t act now, by 2030 Africa will account for 80 per cent of the world’s poor. Is this the legacy that we want to leave for future generations?
The AU declared 2014 as the year of Agriculture and Food Security. And this is the year we look beyond the deadline of the Millennium Development Goals to a post-2015 world with new targets to reach.
I hope this means that we will be dedicating ourselves fully to making agriculture a priority. GDP growth due to agriculture has been estimated to be five times more effective in reducing poverty than growth in any other sector, and in sub-Saharan Africa, up to 11 times.
Small family farmers in some parts of our continent contribute as much as 80 per cent of food production. Investing in poor rural people is good economics.
A full 60 per cent of our people depend wholly or partly on agriculture for their livelihoods, and the vast majority live below the poverty line. It’s not pity and handouts they need. It’s access to markets and finance, land tenure security, knowledge and technology, and policies that favour small farms and make it easier for them to do business.
A thriving small farm sector helps rural areas retain the young people who would otherwise migrate to overcrowded cities where they face an uncertain future. Investing in agriculture reinforces not only food security, but general security.
In an Africa where 20 states are classified as fragile and 28 countries need food assistance, the need for a real rural transformation backed by investment is critical.
Investments must be focused on smallholder family farms. Small farms make up 80 per cent of all farms in sub-Saharan Africa. And contrary to conventional wisdom, small farms are often more productive than large farms.
Simple technologies – such as improved seeds, irrigation and fertiliser – could triple productivity, triggering transformational growth in the agricultural sector. It is estimated that irrigation alone could increase output by up to 50 per cent in Africa.
Rural areas also need the right investments in infrastructure – roads, energy, storage facilities, social and financial services – and enabling policies backed by governance structures that ensure inclusiveness.
If we look at the countries that have met the Maputo commitment, we see that investing in agriculture works. Given that agriculture has become lucrative for private investors, and about 60 per cent of the planet’s available uncultivated agricultural land is in Africa, there is no mystery why we hear about so-called ‘land grabs’. Opportunity draws foreign investors. There is nothing wrong with foreign investment. But it has to be managed, to the benefit of all.
How Obama Won the Social Media Battle in the 2012 Presidential Campaign
How Obama Won the Social Media Battle in the 2012 Presidential Campaign
Victor MbonicaThe 2008 Obama Presidential campaign made history. Not only was Obama the first African American to be elected president, but he was also the first presidential candidate to effectively use social media as a major campaign strategy. It’s easy to forget, given how ubiquitous social media is today, that in 2008 sending out voting reminders on Twitter and interacting with people on Facebook was a big deal. When Obama announced his candidacy in 2007, Twitter had only just started and there wasn’t even an iPhone yet.An effective social media campaign is based on the psychology of social behaviors not the current technology

Four years later, the media landscape looks a lot different. There are an ever-increasing number of social media tools and a rapidly growing user base across all demographics. Current measures of American adults who use social networks are at 69%; that’s up significantly from the 37% of those who had social network profiles in 2008. And contrary to concerns about social media causing civic disengagement, numbers out of Pew Research show that 66% of social media users actively engage in political activism online. They estimate that to be the equivalent of 39% of all American adults. Like many other behaviors, online activities translate into offline ones. Researchers at the MacArthur Research Network on Youth & Participatory Politics report that young people who are politically active online are twice as likely to vote than those who are not.
In the run-up to the 2012 presidential election, there was lots of speculation about the potential impact of social media this time around. In 2008, McCain’s campaign was as social-media-deaf as Obama’s was social-media-savvy. Would the Romney campaign be able to compete in the social cyberspace? Would the Obama campaign be able to effectively harness social technologies again?
Like JFK was the first president who really understood television, Obama is the first social media president. In 2012, Obama not only had the expertise on his team, he had an established social media machine up and running. Since social media is about relationships, having a running start building those connections is a distinct benefit. While the Romney campaign was not left in the dust as McCain’s had been, they did not achieve the traction that the Democrats did.

Obama dominated the social media space because his team got how networks work. The real power of social media is not in the number of posts or Tweets but in user engagement measured by content spreadability. For example, Obama logged twice as many Facebook “Likes” and nearly 20 times as many re-tweets as Romney. With his existing social media base and spreadable content, Obama had far superior reach.
The real drivers of an effective social media campaign, however, are based on the psychology of social behaviors not the current technology.
Participatory Democracy
Social media creates a new political dialogue. It takes the power of political messaging away from the mass media model and places it firmly into peer-to-peer, public discourse. In the 1950s, sociologists Lazersfeld and Katz proposed a two-step model of communication. Their model proposed that opinions area not formed through direct information from mass media but through individual interactions with opinion leaders who were similar in demographics, interests, and socio-economic factors to those they influenced. In other words, opinion leaders are the people you connect with on your social networks, such as family, friends, colleagues and shared-interest group members. As any marketer will tell you, word of mouth advertising—a recommendation from someone you trust–is the most powerful form of persuasion. Social media creates multiple levels of trust based on relationships. Social media also allows information and opinions to travel across networks, like ripples in a pond, amplifying ideas and allowing each person to participate as an opinion leader through media production and distribution, not just by passive consumption. In the 2012 election, 30% of online users report that they were urged to vote via social media by family, friends or other social network connections, 20% actively encouraged others and 22% posted their decision when the voted.
There are lots of social dynamics that influence people’s opinions and behaviors. From social validation to familiarity that turns into acceptance, social networks and the ability to link peer to peer, supercharge the type of self-organizing movement that Obama’s campaign seeded through strategic social media use.
Individual Agency
The increasing use of social media demonstrates to people the power they have as individuals to make a difference increasing both individual and collective agency. Obama’s group tapped into this increasing sense of political empowerment to generate support in spreading the word, encouraging other voters and raising funds. Social media and text messaging create opportunities for individual involvement that feel personal. Personal encourages participation; participation creates ownership. By encouraging contribution through small donations using the social media and cellphones rather than focusing on the traditional big donor strategy, Obama’s campaign succeeded in raising nearly $1billion not to mention the breadth of social capital.
A Campaign of Memes
The immediacy of social media creates instant channels for memes—an idea or symbol—to take hold and spread rapidly. Memes become a dominant cultural event; they frame or even override other messaging. Romney’s campaign was hurt by their lack of understanding of both this phenomenon and the fluidity of Internet media channels. The most notable meme faux pas was the ‘binders full of women’ remark that started on Twitter and immediately went viral across multiple media including parody accounts on Tumblr, Twitter and Facebook.The Use of Big Data
A final aspect of the Obama campaign’s social media success comes from the increasing sophistication of online data collection. We may equate data harvesting with large online presences such as Google or Amazon, but they aren’t the only ones mining user data. The ability to collect and analyze data on a large scale allowed the Obama team to model behaviors and coordinate and target communications based. They could, for example, predict which types of people could be persuaded by which forms of contact and content. The Obama field offices ranked call lists in order of persuadability allowing them to predict donor behaviors and to mobilize volunteers to get people out to vote, particularly in the critical swing states.Smart Social Media Strategy Matters
As the 2012 elections show, social media is no longer the “exciting new frontier” for political campaigning. Social media is a normal and central form of communications with distinctly different properties than traditional mass media approaches. Obama has set the bar for future campaigns but social media and network structures should be given serious attention in the media strategy, whether it’s for politicians, organizations, brands or public service initiatives.
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