Kenya 🇰🇪 Teachers Are The Most Well Paid In East Africa

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ANALYSIS By Dorris Otieno Kenyan teachers are not only the best paid in East Africa, but also earn almost 12 times more than the country's average pay, a comparative study by Nation Newsplex and the Institute of Economic Affairs reveals. Even as teachers go on strike for the 12th time since their first industrial action in 1962, the analysis, which compares teachers' salaries in Kenya with those of their peers in select African countries , also finds that the lowest-paid teacher in Kenya earns more than the highest-paid teacher in Uganda. Uganda and South Africa were chosen as countries against which to compare wages of teachers because they have the most up-to-date data against which the comparison could be made. While Tanzania was not included in the comparison because only average pay for the year 2011 was available, even its figures indicated that Kenyan teachers earn more than their Tanzanian counterparts. The highest paid Kenyan teacher earns almost 12 times more than the

Investment Opportunities in the Provision of Different Services in Tanzania



Investment Opportunities in the Provision of Different Services in Tanzania 


Tanzania’s service sector has increased in the last few years relative to other sectors. Tourism, real estate, and business services helped the broader service sector grow to an estimated 43.8 percent of Tanzania’s GDP in 2007. 
A worth noting point is how important the Public Private Partnership concept in terms of bridging the gap between the need and supply of high-quality services that require a substantial amount of initial capital investment. Some of these services include transport and communications, which are essentially public utilities, but which, in a developing economy, is too expensive for the Government alone or the private sector to execute, but which, due to the essential nature require close coordination between the public and private partnership.



Similarly, utilities like electricity and water are essential services which the public needs, but which also, in developing economies, may be too expensive for either the Government or the private sector to individually execute. 

These services, therefore, require some sort of concerted efforts between the government and partners in the form of Public –Private Partnership (PPP). The Services Sector is thus one vast area where PPP Partnerships seem to offer appropriate solutions in implementation for the public good, and where investments can be planned and accomplished in coordination between the Government and the private sector.



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