Now US imitating China

[COLOR=rgb(44, 130, 201)]Comment: With all the stink in Aftica, the USA is gearing up to woe Africa with a flood of legal dollars. I’m giddy waiting to see the gluttonous African leaders torn between China and the US. Those kes 100,000.00 wheelbarrows are about to be legitimized. All the more reason why assumption of foreign debt must be curtailed. Someone like our current Auditor General should be responsible for approving debt-incurring projects other than politically motivated, illiterate buffoons. This is in no way meant to diminish the devt projects undertaken by the last two regimes, but to sound the alert should our esteemed citizenry elect to send Sonko or Joho to the house on the hill.

[SIZE=7]China is 'pouring money
into Africa.’ Here’s how the US can level the playing field[/SIZE]

The African continent offers real opportunities thanks to some of the world’s fastest growing economies and an expanding labor force.

As a Cabinet Secretary and a Democratic Member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, respectively, we agree that the United States must do more to present our African partners with better alternatives to state-led economic models, promoted by countries like China, so Africa can assume its rightful place in the global economy.
Through efforts such as its Belt and Road Initiative, China is pursuing a neo-mercantilist vision that uses investment in infrastructure to secure an economic foothold, from which it is attempting to secure political, diplomatic, and in some cases military access, with potentially serious consequences for U.S. interests from Central Asia to Eastern Europe and Africa. China is, at the same time, bankrolling new financial organizations that aim to rival or displace the international institutions created by the United States and its allies after the Second World War.

By pouring money into Africa, China has seen an opportunity to both gain political influence and to reap future rewards in a continent whose economies are predicted to boom in the coming decades.

Just spend a few hours in a major African city – from Abidjan, to Addis Ababa, to Nairobi – and you will see the hallmarks of China’s economic presence. Over the past decade, China has either financed or contributed to financing infrastructure projects across the continent, offering billions of dollars in commercial loans at concessional rates to African governments and state-owned entities. But China’s commercial path has not always applied the highest international standards of openness, inclusivity, transparency, and governance.

The United States seeks sovereign African states that are integrated into the world economy, able to provide for their citizens’ needs, and capable of managing threats to peace and security. We oppose opaque investment and development initiatives that impose undue costs and burdens on recipients, limiting their options for determining their own future.

Fragmented and outdated

As competitors like China explore opportunities to leverage state financing to pave economic inroads, U.S. government foreign investment entities remain fragmented and outdated. The Overseas Private Investment Corporation, the leading U.S. development finance institution, is unable to compete with its Chinese counterpart. Unlike Chinese institutions, OPIC works to fund private sector-led projects that will be economically sound over the long haul. Yet the agency lacks any consistent Congressional authorization and has no way of leveraging new financial tools that have drastically changed the face of the global economy.

Passage of the Better Utilization of Investments Leading to Development Act of 2018, better known as the BUILD Act, would change this unsustainable situation. This bipartisan legislation would reform and modernize government development finance by establishing the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (IDFC).

Moreover, this legislation would allow the IDFC to more than double OPIC’s investment portfolio and allow us to participate in equity investments, provide technical assistance, and issue catalytic grants to mobilize capital for innovative projects that advance our national security and foreign policy objectives. Most importantly, the Congressional Budget Office estimates that, on net, implementing the legislation would reduce Federal costs and direct spending.

The BUILD Act also contains important reforms to reduce risks to taxpayers and ensures Congress will maintain strong oversight to make certain the agency does not provide financing where the private sector could.

By modernizing our development finance tools, the United States can send a clear message that we will continue to lead the world in supporting sound, responsible and fair economic growth, as well as sustainable and equitable business practices. This matters more than ever before as developing countries decide whether to follow a model based on free market capitalism, the rule of law and transparency, or an opaque, autocratic, state-led alternative that promotes corruption, debt, and dependency.

The BUILD Act will make a difference

Passage of the BUILD Act will make a real difference by increasing American investment in low and middle-income countries while also making a positive impact on local communities and populations. In 2017, OPIC investments supported 13,000 new jobs in host countries. With the BUILD Act, this number could grow significantly, helping to create new trading partners and therefore greater prosperity for the United States and our partners.

By planting the seeds of free market growth, the IDFC will help businesses and economies grow by supporting critical development projects in sectors such as energy, agriculture, infrastructure, and healthcare around the world.

The President’s Advisory Council on Doing Business in Africa, a 50-person strong delegation of American CEOs and senior leaders of the United States Government tasked with identifying and addressing barriers to expanding trade with African partners, recently concluded a two-week fact-finding mission to Ethiopia, Kenya, Côte d’Ivoire, and Ghana.

At each stop, the delegation heard from host governments and the private sector about the critical need for development finance reform to even the playing field for American companies. With the BUILD Act having just passed the House, and now proceeding in the Senate, we must send a loud and clear message: The United States intends to remain fully engaged in Africa and elsewhere in the developing world. The IDFC would expand America’s influence there and help support its private sector.

The BUILD Act has the support of the Trump Administration and a bipartisan coalition, including Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Bob Corker, R-Tenn. and Senator Tim Kaine, D-Va. It unanimously passed the House of Representatives, with a bipartisan coalition led by Representatives Ted Yoho, R-Fla. and Adam Smith, D-Wash.

The two of us, supporters of the bill from two political parties and two branches of government now urge the Senate to act swiftly to ensure the United States maintains its historic role spearheading global economic growth and prosperity.

Commentary by Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., and Wilbur Ross, Secretary of Commerce and a member of the Board of Directors of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC).

Let the show down begin

Let the fight of egos comence .

@patco changia

A little too late. If America failed to stabilize its own colony of Liberia which is now set to flourish to Chinese investments. What can they do in Africa unless of starting more wars and its corporates to loot in the billions?

USAID can continue…

America bado itakopeshwa na Shainaman

Halafu ilete hiyo mkopo huku ‘Aftica’ as the first line of this copy and paste job claims…

I think the horse has already bolted.

Better to give birth to a thief than to an idiot like @Amused?

cc. @Gerald Achieng Achieng Kamau , @blackguards

Na kwani niulize? Kwani ndio mara ya kwanza wao kupatiana loan? Weren’t they here before the Chinese?

kuwa mpole banaa.
anyways we are back to an error similar to what we witnessed in the cold war. this time round the US has to give us something tangible, as the china is doing. i’m hoping they will pull the rug off Chinese feet, and bring all that manufacturing to Africa. that will checkmate the Chinese for a long time if not permanently.

Leave it to Kenyans to turn a US//China discussion into a Joho//Sonko discussion. More power to our jobless youth.

Cold War? America and its allies literally robbed the futures of millions of African men, women, and children. They created the perpetuated State of war and chaos that very much plague the continent. We cannot forget that fact! How can America be our savior and at the same time be our Executioner?

Also, what manufacturing will the USA bring to Africa? What they replicated with China they will not do it in Africa…

Looking at most large scale Manufacturing projects across the continent they’re all coming from China. Africa will be China’s factory as wages and standard of living increases in China. In a few decades, Africa will be making things for the Chinese market. The West has decided to move on and begin robotizing its factories…

are you aware of the fact that if the US was to shift its manufacturing from china, the chinese economy would be greatly devastated , or even grind to a halt ?

hapa America hawawezi hata na dawa. nimesema hapa countless times that America does not understand Africa and they have never taken their time to do so. Hizo mikopo zao huja na so many strings attatched watu watazidi kuendea tu chainaman

But as things stand currently we already have foreign manufacturing in Kenya and not INDEGENOUS, KENYAN BORN manufacturing. In fact foreign manufacturing is all the manufacturing we have.

After independence instead of the STATUS QUO akina Kenyatta and friends investing in Kenyans’ dreams they chose to continue to perpetuate the Colonialist dream.

This was not our coffee or tea or agricultural factories! These we have today are still the white man’s crap. There was no discussion to chat out a KENYAN PATH, a KENYAN IDENTITY. The Muthamaki chose to retain the status quo.

They supported the likes of East Africa Industries which became Unilever… they supported Coca cola and Eveready, EABL or even Kakuzi tea, or Brookebond or Firestone or Barclays or CO-OPERATIVE, or Stan Chart or Landrover or… those foreign brands became the nation’s foundation! Complete Madness!

Hizo pombe mnaringa nazo hapa sio zenyu. Those are foreign brands under licence. Zenyu ni muratina na busaa na ziko banned na mkubwa. Labelled inferior. Subaru, Toyota, aquafresh sio zenyu. Meanwhile in Burgandy France a French mama busaa is very busy fermenting grapes to make expensive champagne to sell to the negro…

Congac! Courvoisier! Smirnoff! Remy Martin! Mnazipenda hadi mnaziimbia wimbo. Picha kwa instagram ati mmefika bei. Na ni chang’aa ya mzungu.

Kenya has no indegenous manufacturing. We don’t own Kenya. It is the status quo who co-own manufacturing together with wazungus or wahindis.

The local Kenyan African provides the cheap, slave labour. Hivo ndio mambo iko.

You make a cigarette at British American Tobacco (BAT) and Uhuru takes his cut, the mzungu manufacturer takes his cut, the British govt. and their Queen take their cut and the Luo farmer is left with nothing but loans and chemically induced cancer. Hivo ndio mambo iko since 1963.

And the customer is again the negro who doesn’t know better.

And all those thugs then hide these monies outside Kenya.

Meanwhile, history has clearly shown that no developed nation was built by outsiders. NONE. Unless you brought the outsiders to work as the slave labour to ease the burden.

It is the citizens of those developed countries that build the factories and the companies that build the Nation. And they have very tightly controlled borders to curb dumping but they will readily dump in an idiot’s backyard if you let them.

It is Mr. Toyoda of Japan who built Toyota or Bill Gates of America who built Microsoft and NOT Jung Lee Kwang Chaik who built Microsoft.

So when Uhuru parks Volkswagen in Thika or wherever Kenya won’t grow juu kampuni sio yenyu. It has been built with the idea that the profits will be directed back to Germany sio zibaki huku kwenyu. You are just cheap labour.

There are no shortcuts you have to build your OWN Kenyan Sony or Samsung or Daewoo and compete globally.

SIO MJENGEWE. Hakuna shortcut. Ni mkubwa afunge border Trump style na aseme,

“There will be no Samsung phone or LG Tv coming into Kenya any more we will build our own within four years, for our own needs and then export!”

And instead of pumping money into food farms in the Rift Valley or Nyanza or Central and building good markets and better roads FOR HIS FELLOW AFRICAN FARMERS and even aircraft to airlift the perishables, the Muthamaki instead pumps billions into a desert in Gulana Kulalu and invites Jews (foreigners) to make magic. Hivo ndio alifunzwa. Hizo ndio nyayo anajua. Kenyans are second or third rate to him.

This leader thinks that growth will be spurred by an expensive, foreign built railway line… HOW?

The only person smiling is the China man! How have you changed the African’s life??

The African is still very broke! What containers are these that he is supposed to ferry on your railway line?

Zimetoka wapi hizo containers?

Sawa kapisa
Summary ndio hii hapa

Positive criticism

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1GpXn5OxU4U

Halafu gova yenyewe hata haiwezi kubalia uweke mini hydro power, sa hiyo 7 folks yenyewe iliundwa na deni

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37HIZFOE4_Y

Hata kitu kidogo kama Turbulent technology huwezi kubaliwa

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XiefORPamLU

Tunaeza pia borrow their tech and use for our benefits and purposes. Walituletea technical education kama engineering mbona tusitumie kuunda gari, ndege, electricity etc

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XiefORPamLU

If it was like 15/20 years ago maybe. But China saw such games and ensured they developed there own tech. Secondly they’re now looking to offset some of that low skill manufacturing potential to Africa.

Also China holding significant amounts of dollars reserves could dump the dollar and we’ll watch Wall Street crash America into another great depression.

hehe. Ulikuwa wapi juzi ZTE wakipiga magoti warudishiwe microchips? Trump alizima corporation mzima with one snap of his fingers.