Stifling Economic Progress – Uganda can do better


Stifling is defined as, making one feel constrained or oppressed. Other terms for it are: Suffocating, Stagnant, Breathless, Unventilated and Confined. Today, I could say, “The Government of Uganda is stifling the basic survival of its economically active population.”

It is a known fact that jobs are hard to come by in this country and people have been encouraged to seek opportunities through self employment. Never mind the fact that those parroting this talk are belching daily on unfairly spent tax payers money.

As a business owner, for the last 21 years I have always encouraged my staff to set up alternative income generating ventures to insulate themselves from the very unpredictable economic environment we face as a nation. I am sure what I am talking about is best appreciated or understood by those who either are lacking jobs, self employed or have been hit by job loss. For a regular salaried and pensionable person, you could as well take this as a rant of frustration.

The growth of technology especially the internet has helped open up numerous avenues to facilitate multitudes of Ugandans get economically active. What the likes of WhatsApp, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram have done to revolutionise the business setup of this economy can never be underestimated. We might have kicked off using social media for gossip but that is no longer the case.

Social media has become a business highway for the many micro entrepreneurs trying to earn in order to fulfil their dreams. Many are buying and selling simple items like shoes, clothes, food, household items, spare parts, among others using social media. Others are selling services like writing articles/blogs, marketing, offering counselling, business support, monitoring, proposal writing, managing payments etc. The list is endless.

The nation might have been faced with a security threat that necessitated some level of drastic actions to avert but not to the extent of shutting down the internet in its entirety like it was done on the 13th of January 2021, a day to the nationwide elections.

You do not seal yourself in a vacuum just because you don’t want to breathe in toxic air. While there was a concern by the powers that be whose priority was regime preservation, it shouldn’t come at the cost of impoverishing the rest of society. Many of us do not earn regular salaries and our income on a daily basis is what makes us exist.

A colleague that I once worked with currently running an online electronics sales platform called me up two days back and his tone was way unlike him. It had this defeatist feel about it and when he told me how the internet shutdown due to elections had grossly affected him, I could feel it. He then asked me what organisations like The Internet Society of Uganda, The ICT Association of Uganda, National Information Technology Authority – Uganda have to say about this.

No sooner had I got off the call, than two others I know shared their frustration of believing in Uganda as their place of choice to chase their dreams of technological revolution. I nearly cried because I have been through this kind of frustration before and seeing it recur is simply a pointer to a gross sad state of affairs.

We are reeling from the effects of Covid-19 that have greatly diminished our incomes. As we mutate with the hope of guaranteeing our survival, those meant to steer the ship called Uganda are simply out of touch with reality. They may be able to comfortably pay school fees for their children anywhere in the world but that doesn’t mean that we all can even pay school fees with ease in local neighbourhood schools. Some people can’t even pay rent, let alone feed families simply because an income of a paltry UGX 20,000/= daily has been put to a halt.

For a fully fledged minister to come up and start threatening Ugandans using Virtual Private Networks (VPN) with arrest is simply a sign of a thought process in limbo. Hon. Peter Ogwang, as the State Minister for the Ministry of ICT and National Guidance, you have alot on your hands than run around like Tom chasing Jerry in the cartoon Tom & Jerry.

People simply want to survive, that’s why they use the VPN. Unfortunately some quarters are obsessed with viewing the VPN from political lenses while the majority of us are viewing it with economic lenses. Allow us breathe.

In my mother tongue, Lunyole, we have a saying that loosely translates to; When you press the nose hard enough, it ends up bleeding. Don’t make us bleed. Enough is enough. Allow us fend for our families the best way we can, after all, the responsibility of promoting business growth among the locals has been discarded in preference for foreigners.

Time is usually the best teacher. Repressive moves especially when misguided have a way of bouncing back to the sender. We all need a country that makes us happy and proud of being a part of it.

God Bless Uganda. I Love Uganda. For God and my country.

James Wire

Technology and Business Consultant

Twitter – @wirejames 

Email – lunghabo [at] gmail.com

The Wire Perspective – http://wirejames.com

Rice saga shows the BUBU lip service


Nationalism is one thing that is hard to maintain in Uganda. I love everything about Uganda’s resource endowment but the various efforts being put into stunting our potential to exploit these resources irks me so much.

You might have already heard about the move by the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Cooperatives to grant a license to Ms Gotovate Uganda Ltd to import upto 50,000 tonnes of rice tax free from Tanzania.

One wonders why the Government deems it fit to make such a move at this point in time. For those not in the know, Uganda’s rice industry has been growing in leaps and bounds thanks to initiatives aimed at promoting upland rice as well as research into new high yielding varieties.

Production is rising as various regions of the country take up rice farming. Rice is to farmers in other regions of the country what Milk is to Western Uganda. Alot of support was extended to the diary industry and it’s no surprise that today the country is a leading milk producer on the African continent. We can achieve the same with rice and improve massively on the household incomes across the board.

By choosing to import rice, it simply means that the authorities aren’t interested in seeing rice farmers get decent income from their efforts. This whole move is shrouded in mystery as reported by The Daily Monitor.

Without mincing words, this is a well crafted plot by fly by night speculators whose overall aim is to make money irrespective of the harm they bring upon the populace. They tend to collude with gluttonous officials that have made it in life through being crooks.

The promises made by the government to improve people’s incomes as well as retaining money in the economy make such moves defeatist. If these belching crude officials were to exchange roles with the rice farmers, they would perhaps appreciate the pain that we are going through now.

Honourable Amelia Kyambadde the Minister of Trade is one person that is known for occasionally doing the right thing at least but a couple of questionable decisions she has made in the past have soiled her reputation among local business people. Take a look at how she handled the Uchumi and Nakumatt supermarket closures and you’ll wonder whether her team has a genuine commitment to Buy Uganda Build Uganda.

For too long, various so called planners have always accused Ugandans of not being able to effectively harness the opportunities before them. However, how shall we be expected to get the best of the opportunities when every time our initiatives are sprouting, executive decisions deliberately cripple them?

I think it is high time we realised that there are people out there in the corridors of power that dislike seeing the local Ugandan get rich. By opening up tax free imports of rice for a few regime royals, the small holder rice farmer is being intentionally suffocated.

It is my prayer that someone prevails upon the officials responsible for this decision. Ugandans have a right to be protected economically.

James Wire

Business Consultant & Farmer

@wirejames on Twitter