Battle: Dar es Salaam vs Nairobi

Battle: Dar es Salaam vs Nairobi

as long as Kunyaland is not a mining country, there is no way Kunyaland can be ahead of Tanzania in vehicles! unless mining vehicles r not counted!

Here is the Unbelievable Total Number of Registered Vehicles in Kenya​

2 months
fb@2x.png
wa.png
tw@2x.png

The number of vehicles and vehicle owners in Kenya has been increasing at an increasing rate. According to National Transport and Safety Authority (NTSA), by 2015, Nairobi alone registered approximately 7,000 thousand vehicles per month, a rate that could see Nairobi alone hub about 1.3 million registered vehicles by 2030. The number has however been increasing rapidly, thanks to the rising number of affordable motor vehicles
628bf3362ab2470eaadb57b418785ba4
Photo Courtesy
Kenya is currently on the fifth generation of number plates from KDA0001A which began late 2020. According to statistics from Kenya Bureau of Statistics, by the end of 2017, the total number of registered vehicles in Kenya was 2,989,788. The number increased to 3,280,934 in 2018, an increase of 291,146 which translates to about 10% increase per annum.
cecf8e68056f47e8977da44bcb719f9a

Photo courtesy
Going by this rate, the appropriate number of registered vehicles in Kenya was approximately 3.9 million by the end of 2020. Calculating the rate and considering 2021 is still in the fifth month, the rate of registration of vehicles per month will be approximately 30,000 vehicles. That means as at now, Kenya has approximately 4.1 million registered vehicles.
e92ef196e2664a309752085a928c58ef

Photo Courtesy
Going by this rate, the government will in future be forced to come up with new strategies to regulate registration and most importantly to control traffic in Kenya's major towns.
 
🇹🇿🇹🇿🇹🇿🇹🇿🇹🇿

Stephen Ndegwa​



Stephen Ndegwa

Country Manager for Serbia, Europe and Central Asia Region


Stephen Ndegwa is the World Bank Country Manager for Serbia.
Prior to this position, Mr. Ndegwa was the Operations Manager responsible for the World Bank program in Afghanistan. Between 2011 and 2014, he was Adviser with Operations Policy and Country Services based at the World Bank's Center on Conflict, Security and Development and he was a member of the core team writing the 2011 World Development Report on conflict, security and development.
Mr. Ndegwa joined the World Bank in 2002 as Young Professional and has since worked on governance, political economy, and public sector capacity building across several regions. He has served as a Lead Specialist in the Governance Global Practice and has worked on programs in the Africa, Latin America, Middle East, South Asia, and East Asia and Pacific regions.
Prior to joining the World Bank, Mr. Ndegwa was Associate Professor of Government at The College of William and Mary (Virginia, USA, 1994-2002). In 2010, he was a Rice Family Faculty Fellow at Yale University and a non-resident Visiting Fellow at the National Endowment for Democracy (Spring 2011). He is the author or editor of several books and his research articles have appeared in leading journals including award-winning work in the American Political Science Review.
Mr. Ndegwa holds a PhD in political science and public policy from Indiana University (USA, 1993).
 
Poor country like Tanzania, nchi ya city moja, weak revenue, small economic output,., ufukara kona yote utatuambia nini wewe?.., numbers never lie, check with your govt data uone aibu.., mnapenda hadithi za vijiweni facts mkipewa mnaanza kutapatapa na vijimaneno.., 😂 😂 😂
Tafuta official souce alaf nitag mm 😂😂😂
 
A worthy competition.., leta total imports and exports across board tuone..., bado sana..., mahindi ndio inajaza number, a very fluctuating commodidy, leo mna soko kesho mnakosa.., not solid or a stable move..,
Endelea kukariri ujinga kichwani,tumeshawashinda na time make deficit from range of products kuanzia cereals hadi manufactured goods.

😃😃😃😃 Maisha yanaenda kasi Sana,soma hiyooo👇👇

Screenshot_20210812-150812.png


Screenshot_20210812-150903.png
 
cereals ndio major.., get the breakdown na uweke hapa, maneno wachia vilaza humu.., weka detailed breakdown, I guess it is there...,
💉💉💉💉 Wewe akili huna,ingekuwa sio mojor ingeleta deficit kwenye balance of payment yenu? 😁😁 Nani kafaidika sasa hapo sisi au nyie?
 
💉💉💉💉 Wewe akili huna,ingekuwa sio mojor ingeleta deficit kwenye balance of payment yenu? 😁😁 Nani kafaidika sasa hapo sisi au nyie?
In that nyie mmebenefit, my argument isn't against the news, nasema such isn't sustainable, it can be turned around any time., Uganda has ever done that in the recent past due to majorly maize exports to Kenya..., na unajua nani wananunua bidhaa tanzania na kuleta Kenya kwa wingi? wakenya wengi (both in uganda and Tz) wananunua kutoka kwa wakulima or middlemen kisha wana uzia Kenya.., central bank captured the cost of imports.., not the actual details of importers.., unajua biashara ya borders kweli? umewahi husika? haswa ya chakula?.., hiyo ni pesa yenye Kenya inawapea, na ile wakenya wanatengeneza kutokana na hizo cereals zenyu na other agricultural produce wewe unajua kweli?..,
 
sio
Endelea kukariri ujinga kichwani,tumeshawashinda na time make deficit from range of products kuanzia cereals hadi manufactured goods.

😃😃😃😃 Maisha yanaenda kasi Sana,soma hiyooo👇👇

View attachment 1889592

View attachment 1889593
sio jambo jipya.., mostly ni chakula tu.., leo soko ipo kesho hakuna..,
Uganda pia walisha onja utamu wa pesa za Kenya.., mmechelewa bro..,
mwenye anaelewa economics such news hazimshangazi, he cant get orgasm from such.., it is fluid, not solid

Uganda for the first time exports more to Kenya, than it imports​

The Independent November 1, 2018 Business, NEWS Leave a comment


Amelia-Kyambadde-2.jpg
FILE PHOTO: Minister Kyambadde
Kampala, Uganda | THE INDEPENDENT | For the first time, Uganda registered USD 122 million trade surplus with Kenya, with exports worth USD 628 million to and imports worth USD 505 million. Uganda had in the previous year exported goods valued at USD 475 million and imported goods valued at USD 516 million to Kenya, registering USD 41 million in the trade deficit.
Altogether, Uganda earned USD 413 million (1.5 trillion Shillings) from trade with neighboring countries during the 2017/18 financial year. Exports to the East African Community region totaled USD 1.2 billion, while imports were valued at USD 806 million.
South Sudan topped the regional markets for Uganda’s exports with goods worth USD 311 million (1.2 trillion Shillings). During the same time, Uganda imported goods worth USD 14.5 million (54 billion Shillings) from South Sudan, registering a surplus of USD 296 million (1.1 trillion Shillings).
Exports to Rwanda were valued at USD 197 million while the imports were valued at USD 20 million, registering a surplus of USD 177 million, according to records released today by Trade, Industry and Cooperatives Minister Amelia Kyambadde at the sector review meeting held in Kampala.
For the first time, Uganda registered USD 122 million trade surplus with Kenya, with exports worth USD 628 million to and imports worth USD 505 million. Uganda had in the previous year exported goods valued at USD 475 million and imported goods valued at USD 516 million to Kenya, registering USD 41 million in the trade deficit.
ECOSLIM
Drink this before bed, watch your body fat melt like crazy
LEARN MORE
Kyambadde said Uganda registered a trade deficit with Tanzania with exports worth USD 61 million to Tanzania and imports worth USD 169 million. The Uganda-Tanzania trade deficit rose steeply from USD 14 million recorded in the 2016/17 financial year.
There is also low trade volume between Uganda and Burundi. Uganda exported goods valued at USD 36 million to Burundi and imported goods valued at USD 56 million.
Kyambadde said there are a number of non-tariff trade barriers that Uganda is mitigating to scale down trade deficit with Tanzania. She attributed trade surplus with the East African Community to regional integration and multilateral efforts spearheaded by the trade ministry.
The Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) region remains Uganda’s main trading partner. The country exported goods worth USD 1.48 billion to COMESA countries, followed by the European Union with exports valued at USD 568 million and Middle East bloc with exports valued at USD 414 million.


In total, Uganda’s exports in the 2017/18 financial year were valued at USD 2.89 billion while imports were worth USD 5.48 billion, recording a trade deficit of USD 2.59 billion. Countries with which Uganda had the highest trade deficits are China (USD 845 million), India (USD 596 million), Saudi Arabia (USD 384 million) and United Arab Emirates (USD 277 million).
exports-to-kenya.jpg
 
sema cameraman alikuwa anaconcentrate na huyo mdada mwenye jeans ya blue .. there’s a time he had a chance kumuovertake but akamsubiria mdada awe mbele yake tena
Mzima Simon?? Khaa mimi nilisikiliza ujumbe! 🙏 🙏 🤭 🤭
 
Back
Top Bottom