@iamNehemia 1. "kuwa against" na "kutokuwa chawa wa... " ni vitu viwili tofauti.
2. Serikali na CCM ni vitu viwili tofauti.
3. Hata ingekuwa kila mtu anafanya jambo baya, si justification ya kulifanya.
Soma ujifunze!
@Uchumi360 Your hate and bad wish towards Kenya is noticeable.
Why should anyone talk about a country with 70M unskilled population ?
Why are you silent on Tanzania's budget for debt servicing?
Did you know that 70% of Tanzania's debt is foreign while only 40% of Kenya's is?
@KennedyMmari Why is Kenya broke and not Tanzania?
Is it because of debt servicing?
Only 40% of Kenya's debt is foreign while in Tanzania, it's 70%!
How is Tanzania's spending more disciplined when over TZS 1 is allocated for funding travels alone?
@BarakaMaviatu@KennedyMmari Hebu tuhitimishe hii issue kwa kuweka bayana hili:
Watu wengi (kutoka nchi zote) wanakwenda nje kwa sababu ipi hasa:
1. Kukimbia shida za mambo ya msingi kama chakula na malazi au
2. Kutafuta fursa za kutumia vipaji na ujuzi wao kuongeza kipato?
@BarakaMaviatu@KennedyMmari Hii habari ya CCM umeitoa wapi?
Mimi nakupa evidence kwa nini watanzania hawana nafasi kwenye nchi za watu, wewe umeng'ang'ana na ccm mara njaa mara vita mara matatizo ya kijamii.
Hii ni nini kama si akili mgando?
Kenya Is the World's 11th Best Outsourcing Destination and Africa Has 7 Countries in the Global Top 25. Tanzania Ranks 100th Despite Near-Identical Labour Costs to Kenya. The Gap Is Almost Entirely Explained by One Variable.
We reached out directly to @Ataraxis_Mgmt, the publisher of the 2026 Global Outsourcing Talent Index. We asked for the numbers behind East Africa's rankings. What he sent back stopped us.
Tanzania scores 97 out of 100 on labour cost. Higher than India. Higher than the Philippines. Higher than every Western European economy. The United States scores 45 on the same variable. Germany scores 58. The United Kingdom scores 65. Tanzania ranks 100th overall.
We asked Atuahene why, and his answer was precise: "Tanzania and Uganda are identical on talent availability, digital infrastructure, and business stability. Labor cost is nearly identical. English is the only meaningful divergence, and it accounts for the entire 76-position difference between them." Uganda ranks 24th. Tanzania ranks 100th. One variable separates them.
The simulation Atuahene confirmed for us is the number that should be in every education ministry in the region. Raise Tanzania's English proficiency from 40 to 90, matching Kenya, and Tanzania moves from 100th to approximately 20th globally.
And then he said something that reframes the entire regional policy conversation: "Talent availability, not English proficiency, is what separates Kenya from the rest of East Africa. Policymakers who treat English as the primary lever and talent as a secondary concern are likely misreading the data."
Ethiopia scores 70 on talent availability, matching Malaysia and South Africa globally. Kenya scores 50. Uganda and Tanzania score 40. Rwanda scores 10. That 60-point spread is the variable most policy conversations are getting wrong.
Seven African countries are in the global top 25 outsourcing destinations. Africa accounts for 28 percent of the world's most competitive outsourcing markets.
The full analysis is on @Uchumi360 website and on the Uchumi360 Mobile App.
https://t.co/wTRyQGKru0
Kenya Is the World's 11th Best Outsourcing Destination and Africa Has 7 Countries in the Global Top 25. Tanzania Ranks 100th Despite Near-Identical Labour Costs to Kenya. The Gap Is Almost Entirely Explained by One Variable.
We reached out directly to @Ataraxis_Mgmt, the publisher of the 2026 Global Outsourcing Talent Index. We asked for the numbers behind East Africa's rankings. What he sent back stopped us.
Tanzania scores 97 out of 100 on labour cost. Higher than India. Higher than the Philippines. Higher than every Western European economy. The United States scores 45 on the same variable. Germany scores 58. The United Kingdom scores 65. Tanzania ranks 100th overall.
We asked Atuahene why, and his answer was precise: "Tanzania and Uganda are identical on talent availability, digital infrastructure, and business stability. Labor cost is nearly identical. English is the only meaningful divergence, and it accounts for the entire 76-position difference between them." Uganda ranks 24th. Tanzania ranks 100th. One variable separates them.
The simulation Atuahene confirmed for us is the number that should be in every education ministry in the region. Raise Tanzania's English proficiency from 40 to 90, matching Kenya, and Tanzania moves from 100th to approximately 20th globally.
And then he said something that reframes the entire regional policy conversation: "Talent availability, not English proficiency, is what separates Kenya from the rest of East Africa. Policymakers who treat English as the primary lever and talent as a secondary concern are likely misreading the data."
Ethiopia scores 70 on talent availability, matching Malaysia and South Africa globally. Kenya scores 50. Uganda and Tanzania score 40. Rwanda scores 10. That 60-point spread is the variable most policy conversations are getting wrong.
Seven African countries are in the global top 25 outsourcing destinations. Africa accounts for 28 percent of the world's most competitive outsourcing markets.
The full analysis is on @Uchumi360 website and on the Uchumi360 Mobile App.
https://t.co/wTRyQGKru0
Kenya Is the World's 11th Best Outsourcing Destination and Africa Has 7 Countries in the Global Top 25. Tanzania Ranks 100th Despite Near-Identical Labour Costs to Kenya. The Gap Is Almost Entirely Explained by One Variable.
We reached out directly to @Ataraxis_Mgmt, the publisher of the 2026 Global Outsourcing Talent Index. We asked for the numbers behind East Africa's rankings. What he sent back stopped us.
Tanzania scores 97 out of 100 on labour cost. Higher than India. Higher than the Philippines. Higher than every Western European economy. The United States scores 45 on the same variable. Germany scores 58. The United Kingdom scores 65. Tanzania ranks 100th overall.
We asked Atuahene why, and his answer was precise: "Tanzania and Uganda are identical on talent availability, digital infrastructure, and business stability. Labor cost is nearly identical. English is the only meaningful divergence, and it accounts for the entire 76-position difference between them." Uganda ranks 24th. Tanzania ranks 100th. One variable separates them.
The simulation Atuahene confirmed for us is the number that should be in every education ministry in the region. Raise Tanzania's English proficiency from 40 to 90, matching Kenya, and Tanzania moves from 100th to approximately 20th globally.
And then he said something that reframes the entire regional policy conversation: "Talent availability, not English proficiency, is what separates Kenya from the rest of East Africa. Policymakers who treat English as the primary lever and talent as a secondary concern are likely misreading the data."
Ethiopia scores 70 on talent availability, matching Malaysia and South Africa globally. Kenya scores 50. Uganda and Tanzania score 40. Rwanda scores 10. That 60-point spread is the variable most policy conversations are getting wrong.
Seven African countries are in the global top 25 outsourcing destinations. Africa accounts for 28 percent of the world's most competitive outsourcing markets.
The full analysis is on @Uchumi360 website and on the Uchumi360 Mobile App.
https://t.co/wTRyQGKru0
Kenya Is the World's 11th Best Outsourcing Destination and Africa Has 7 Countries in the Global Top 25. Tanzania Ranks 100th Despite Near-Identical Labour Costs to Kenya. The Gap Is Almost Entirely Explained by One Variable.
We reached out directly to @Ataraxis_Mgmt, the publisher of the 2026 Global Outsourcing Talent Index. We asked for the numbers behind East Africa's rankings. What he sent back stopped us.
Tanzania scores 97 out of 100 on labour cost. Higher than India. Higher than the Philippines. Higher than every Western European economy. The United States scores 45 on the same variable. Germany scores 58. The United Kingdom scores 65. Tanzania ranks 100th overall.
We asked Atuahene why, and his answer was precise: "Tanzania and Uganda are identical on talent availability, digital infrastructure, and business stability. Labor cost is nearly identical. English is the only meaningful divergence, and it accounts for the entire 76-position difference between them." Uganda ranks 24th. Tanzania ranks 100th. One variable separates them.
The simulation Atuahene confirmed for us is the number that should be in every education ministry in the region. Raise Tanzania's English proficiency from 40 to 90, matching Kenya, and Tanzania moves from 100th to approximately 20th globally.
And then he said something that reframes the entire regional policy conversation: "Talent availability, not English proficiency, is what separates Kenya from the rest of East Africa. Policymakers who treat English as the primary lever and talent as a secondary concern are likely misreading the data."
Ethiopia scores 70 on talent availability, matching Malaysia and South Africa globally. Kenya scores 50. Uganda and Tanzania score 40. Rwanda scores 10. That 60-point spread is the variable most policy conversations are getting wrong.
Seven African countries are in the global top 25 outsourcing destinations. Africa accounts for 28 percent of the world's most competitive outsourcing markets.
The full analysis is on @Uchumi360 website and on the Uchumi360 Mobile App.
https://t.co/wTRyQGKru0