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MAL:35:20 FIRST WORD Contact Marketing Africa limited P. O. Box 36481- 00200, 3rd Floor, Northstar Building, Lenana Road, Kilimani. Cell: +254 - 717 - 529 052 Email: [email protected] NAIROBI - KENYA Marketing Africa Team William Kalombo, Mutua Mutua, Riapius Magoma, Allan Muraya, Fred Ombati, Sebastian Bungei,Lucy Nyukuri Editorial Contributors Mutua Mutua Herman Githinji Samson Osero Pauline Warui Diana Obath Lucy Kiruthu Gordon Odundo Prof. Alfred Omenya Robert Wamai Richard Wanjohi Dr. Wale Akinyemi Senorine Wasike Carolyne Gathuru Marion Wakahe Kepha Nyanumba Wasilwa Miriongi Dr. Maureen Owiti Mukui Mbindyo Valerie Ambetsa Thrity Engineer-Mbuthia Boniface Ngahu Nicholas Gachara Dr. Catherine Ngahu Walter Nyabundi Dr. Kellen Kiambati Susan Ngatia Marketing Africa Magazine is published by Marketing Africa Limited. Views expressed in the articles and contributions are not neccessarily those of the publisher. The Publisher reserves all rights. Material may only be reproduced with prior arrangement and due acknowledgement to Marketing Africa Magazine. Feedback E: [email protected] W: www.marketingafrica.co.ke @MarketingAfrica Marketing Africa 02 MAL35/20 ISSUE On Social Security W e have a new word in our lexicon called a lockdown and it has its roots in medical isolation to help contain a contagious disease. However the side effects of a lockdown have economic and social ramifications that a nation has to deal with. We are of course familiar with partial lockdowns as was witnessed by Kibera and Mathare residents when the area was cordoned off to keep angry voters who were protesting ‘stolen elections’. It was possible to contain the rioters so we do have some experience in the logistics of the activity. What we are going through at the moment is also a partial lockdown known as a curfew where the country tries to keep Kenyans from the bar. We do also have some experience in this as the 1982 coup attempt resulted in a curfew mainly to ensure malcontents did not regroup for night meetings. When America and Kenya are considering a lockdown, in this case caused by the same issue, the fundamental considerations are very different and this is something we have to discuss and appreciate hoping we don’t have to bite that bullet in any near future. If America was to declare a nationwide emergency and implement a lockdown, the president would ask the congress to release billions of dollars for disaster management to shore up the country until normalcy can be restored and the economy reopened. Even before the dreaded lockdown stimulus packages have been approved to ensure that the demand side of the economic equation is maintained even though movement is restricted to enable the economy coast through the forced inactivity. America would be putting thousands of dollars’ worth of ‘free’ money in the hands of its citizens to ensure they have spending power otherwise the back spiral of collapsed demand will bring down the economy with an unprecedented crash. The sector that would take a hit would be the health sector as it would not be able to cope with a huge influx of sick people and thanks to the rollback on Obamacare in which he was trying to ensure all Americans have access to quality healthcare, many would be excluded especially the undocumented. Unfortunately for Americans the virus does not discriminate and cares little about status and the anti-immigrant lobby is in a quandary since America would be fighting a geographical containment not a political one. They all survive in a locality or all perish. In Kenya a total lockdown would not be an emergency it would be a disaster since our economy cannot sustain such an impact. Our ‘kadogo’ economy is based on daily cash transactions in a basically hand to mouth existence. Kenyans are daily hustlers. Kenya does not have any substantive reserves to offer a mass stimulus package to the economy since in all past disasters we have turned to the donor community for assistance. We have developed