Battle: Dar es Salaam vs Nairobi

Battle: Dar es Salaam vs Nairobi

Tz is produced 6.59 million tonnes hyo ni 2020
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Cement supply exceeds demand by half
ONLINE REPORTER
15 November 2016


COUNTRY’S installed cement production has crossed 8.0 million tonnes per year surpassing aggregate demand by half, the Minister for Industries, Trade and Investment said.

Minister Charles Mwijage said today that the country is currently cement sustainable and two more factories are expected to be constructed in the western zone. “We will export the excess capacity thus earning more foreign revenue,” Mr Mwijage said at a morning breakfast programme aired by Clouds FM.

The figure suggests that Tanzania’s installed cement capacity has surpassed that of Kenya which was projected to produce 8.1 million tonnes per annum by 2018.


This is according to analysts at the Standard Investment Bank (SIB), who made the projection in an East Africa Cement Sector report released in January 2016.

It comes even as cement consumption across East Africa is estimated to reach 17.5 million tonnes in 2019 due to a sustained boom in the construction and real estate sector. In 2014, consumption in the East African countries of Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda is estimated to have stood at 10.16 million tonnes.

http://dailynews.co.tz/index.php/home-news/46531-cement-supply-exceeds-demand-by-half


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Kili not only bring money to Tanzania but also connects Tanzanians with the outside world in so many engagements

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Nyie sema huwa mnapenda kuongozwa kidikteta. Mkiongozwa kiupolepole mnamchukia huyo kiongozi. Mnapenda watu kama Nyerere au Magufuli kwa sababu hawakuwa wanapenda upinzani na walikuwa wakali mno. Mnawachukia JK na mama huyu kwa sababu ni wapole na wastaarabu ambao hawapendi fujo na sinema. Nyie huwa mnapenda mtu anayewapiga ngumi na mateke ili mhisi kwamba mna kiongozi shujaa. Magufuli alikuwa amewasoma saikolojia yenu vizuri sana. Alijua asipowapiga mangumi na mateke, mtaanza kulalamika kwamba rais hajui kufanya kazi yake.
Viongozi wanaolinda rasilimali zetu unawaitaje madikteta? Sisi tunataka asiyecheka katika masuala ya rushwa na anayelinda rasilimali zetu. Unafikiri ni kwa nini Afrika tunaongoza kwa umasikini wakati tunaongoza kwa rasilimali? Ni kwa sababu tumekosa viongozi wazalendo kama Magufuli na Nyerere. Fikiria Afrika nzima tungelikua na maraisi kama Magufuli angalau kwa miaka ishirini tuu hivi sasa tungekua wapi? Umasikini tulionao Afrika ni sababu ya uroho wa viongozi ndugu yangu na kukosa akili.
 
Waandishi wengi wa bongo ni wavivu na hawafanyi research hadi.leo..Imagine...tunapicha za SGR yetu Tz ila.hadi leo wanatumia ya Kenya sometimes
Wengi wao ni wale waliofeli shule ndiyo wamechagua kuwa waandishi wa habari na ndiyo maana tuna waandishi wazembe sn, muda wote wanakazana ku report habari za kipumbavu lkn mambo ya umuhimu hawana habari nayo, hawapendi kusoma wala kusumbua vichwa vyao, useless journalists.
 
naibu waziri tanzania anatumia V8 wakat waziri kenya anatumia prado 150😂😂😂
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Hizi akili zako bro, nikama zimepotea njia naona 😂 😂 😂 😂 ., huwa unaziacha wapi sazingine? 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 😂 huyu Prime Minister wa kuenda kazi kwa baiskeli utasemaje sasa? 😂 😂 ..,Nilikua tu nakuamkua, good morning?..,
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Bad news to the prophets of doom...,

Economy to grow fastest in election year since 1988​

MONDAY JANUARY 31 2022
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Kirinyaga Governor Anne Waiguru addresses wananchi at Kagumo trading centre in Kirinyaga County on November 28, 2021. PHOTO | JOSEPH KANYI | NMG

Kenya’s economy will expand at the fastest pace in an election year since the onset of the multiparty political system two decades ago, supported by increased expenditure, a projection of global economists suggests.

A consensus outlook from 14 world-leading banks, consultancies and think-tanks suggests the economy— as measured by gross domestic product (GDP) — will likely grow 5.4 percent in 2022.

“This year, GDP is seen expanding at a healthy rate due to a sustained rise in household and capital spending,” analysts at Barcelona-based FocusEconomics, who compiled the outlook data between January 18 and 23, wrote in a report on Kenya last week.

“Solid government consumption and a largely accommodative monetary stance will provide an additional boost.”

Although the projected growth signals a slowdown from last year’s which is estimated at about eight percent, it will be the fastest in an election year since the last single-party presidential elections in 1988.

The forecast report has flagged reliance on foreign borrowing to fund infrastructure projects as the biggest downside risk to the outlook. Economists at Moody’s Analytics project a growth of 8.6 percent followed by UK’s Capital Economics (6.5 percent), US’s JPMorgan (6.3 percent), Switzerland-based Julius Baer (5.5 percent) and London-headquartered Euromonitor International (5.3 percent).

Others are American investment bank Goldman Sachs (5.2 percent), New York-based brokerage house Citigroup Global Markets (5.1 percent), while UK’s HSBC, Fitch Solutions and Fitch Ratings have each forecast a 5 percent growth for Kenya.

Economists who see growth of below five percent are those at Washington-headquartered consultancy FrontierView (4.9 percent), Standard Chartered (4.8 percent), Economist Intelligence Unit (4.5 percent) and Oxford Economics (4.3 percent).

“A shift towards looser fiscal policy seems baked in as the authorities provide more support ahead of August’s election,” analysts at Capital Economics wrote in a report last Friday.

The consensus growth outlook is lower than Central Bank of Kenya’s 5.9 percent, but higher than World Bank Group’s 4.7 percent outlook in January 2022. Kenya’s real GDP — a measure of economic output adjusted to inflation—has a history of slowing down during election years when firms put investment decisions on hold pending a return to normalcy in the political landscape.

“We have seen election before —and actually saw double elections five years ago — and another one five years earlier and et cetera,” CBK Governor Patrick Njoroge said last Thursday.

“The fear (of political risk) is more speculative, but let’s just say those are scenarios of a (5.9 percent) baseline.”

During the last election in 2017, the economic growth slowed to 3.82 percent from 4.21 percent the year before, while in 2013 it decelerated to 3.80 percent from 4.57 percent, according to GDP figures which have been revised following last year’s rebasing of the economy.

The aftermath of the deadly December 2007 presidential sunk growth to 0.23 percent in 2008 from 6.85 percent, while in 2002 it slowed to 0.5 percent from 3.78 percent the year before.

The same trend was witnessed in 1997 when growth dropped to 0.48 from 4.15 percent, and in 1992 when it contracted to negative 0.8 percent from 1.44 percent on the onset of multiparty elections.

“Irrespective of the eventual winner (in August poll), the campaign promises of both leading candidates suggest that a new government would ramp up spending,” the Capital Economics analysts said.

Deputy President William Ruto and ODM Party leader Raila Odinga are the leading candidates to succeed President Uhuru Kenyatta who will leave office at the end of constitutional two-term of five years each.
 
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