Total Pageviews

Friday, September 10, 2010

The Hard-nosed Columnist: The Fall of Monopolies,Controversy and the Afterma...

The Hard-nosed Columnist: The Fall of Monopolies,Controversy and the Afterma...: "Recently the president of Kenya signed a considerably controversial bill into law.The bill sought to legalize an illegal brew that defied fi..."

The Fall of Monopolies,Controversy and the Aftermath

Recently the president of Kenya signed a considerably controversial bill into law.The bill sought to legalize an illegal brew that defied first the British colonial State's efforts to stop its consumption ,and later two post--independence eras.

The late Jommo Kenyatta ,the first president of post-independent Kenyan State tried and failed.Former and retired president  Daniel Moi tried  to dissuade chang'aa drinkers from the habit through arbitrary arrests and other means but he,too,failed.The fines meted out on the brewers  proved to be a most hopeless deterrent..Besides, police officers sent to out to  raid chang'aa dens themselves drank what they should have nabbed.


So they were useless missions that then again bred income -generating ventures for the officers in the form of corruption..But arising from the legalization is an interesting phenomenon.The response is twofold.Professional brewers(so to speak)are crying fowl;drinkers are in celebration mood.
According to the brew law,chang'aa shall be packed in bottles and enjoy a similar market environment to that of popular brands here like Pilsner,Tusker Guiness,to name a few.There is a fine,too,targeting those who might contravene the regulations:5 years in jail or 10 million fine in Kenyan currency.The move,aside from everything else in the controversy,put to paid a disgusting brewing monopoly characterized by an increase in beer prices in abandon.Maybe the price of beer will come down  to a reasonable level.                                           + + + + +
                     A market-share war broke here recently.It was over  mobile- service- provider monopoly.Two major companies featured prominently in the battle field--Zain,Kenya and Safaricom.The trouble was the latter's serves over 78 per cent of Kenya's population that is now edging towards 40 million.Other companies share the remaining percentage.Zain deemed the fact unfair ,and in the absence of a fair business tact at the disgrunled companys disposal,the management of zain effected a shocking call rate slash.It brought the price charged for calls down by 50 percent.That was the only way to deal with Safaricom;all other methods had failed over the years.Although the attempted 'ouster' of a communications monopoly did not shake Safaricom much,it has succeeded in alleviating levels of subscriber  exploitation by both companies.A communications official says the battle will adversely affect business.We are yet to see that come to pass.But in the meantime,a monopoly is on its deathbed.                                                                                                   
                                          + + + + + +

The part of Nairobi in which I stay,is entirely a residential area for indusry workers and all manner of middle-income earners.When you are atop a building you see the sprawling Mukuru kwa Njenga and Mukuru Kayaba slums.There are over 100 flats here and ten of the number belong to one person.Still seven others belong to one person.Tenants are at their mercy;rent is raised without consultation.Talk of monopolies.                       + + + + ++ +
    A friend of mine is angry at himself for deciding,on his friends advice in high school that to work in a bank, you must have your hand amputated so you cannot steal money.He dropped business studies .He learn t the truth after the fact.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Don't Rule Out the Possibility of a Wrong Diagnosis

There is a great deal of strange stories here that frequently get a mention in informal conversations.Some are just normal,by the yardstick of ,us, the ordinary people.Yet on serious thought,they are matters of life and death.It is strange, but accustomed ways of our people can be strange;what you smile about here can be something worth worrying about elsewhere.But let me tell you what I have gleaned without exactly intending to.Come with me.

George,I forget his second name,was taken ill three weeks ago.He is a terrible man who finds it difficult to return anything I have lent to him.So I jokingly felt he should die.People don't rush to the doctor here at the slightest  sign of infection.So our friend,George did not do either.He swallowed herbs ,the kind,it is believed,magics away any sort of ailment.Matters did not change.The condition changed from bad to critical.He was sweating profusely,and he got his family worried.

With no hope within sight,he decided to see a doctor. It is only fair to say doctors here do their work well since they are mostly professionals.But they are few.Thus, they are often worked hard.As it turned out,George came by  a fatigued doctor,who upon listening to his heart-beat and testing his body temperature,prescribed malaria drugs in hurry.Mark you the man had no trace of malaria in his body.So?Let's see.

George goes back home on a motorbike despite his feeling dizzy,arrives safe by providence,swallows the medicine as prescribed by the "tired" doctor and goes to bed to 'listen to himself'--in his own words.Ho!Two days elapse, and the man becomes worse by the day.What people do here in the wake of such is to "change the hospital".George does.When you "change  hospital",it means you seek out the services of a private hospital whose patient-doctor ratio is relatively good.Of course at a higher cost.To us cost is nothing especially when it is compared to "GOING UP WITH YOUR MONEY!"
"You are suffering from brucellosis...er rm...George"the stout doctor announces, looking above his glasses.
"Is it curable?"
"Yes..Why?''smiling.
'It's nothing'

Doctors are humans and so are prone to mistakes.Do not disdain the hackneyed advertisers' advice:"If the first doctor's prescription doesn't work,seek the prescription of another doctor in a hurry even if it calls for a deeper thrust into your pockets.Ooh! One thing more.Tell the other doctor what the first doctor said and what you have swallowed.Otherwise you can easily "GO UP"because of a wrong diagnosis.

This is the story George,now recovered, was telling folks the other day in my hearing,and guess what?They were all smiles at such  a life- and- death matter!I couldt help laughing either.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Kicking a Bad Habit Takes a Good Habit

Most people have habits they themselves loath.Interestingly,many of them have confessed to vainly attempting to kick them.How do habits develop and just how can you rid yourself of the bad habits?Watch this space for an insightful discussion of how this can be done.Besides ,you will learn how to nurture good habits and the way to initiate them.