Last week,
President Yoweri Museveni inaugurated a $600 million fertilizer and aluminum
plant in Tororo. A few days before, he had opened a new $150 million bridge
over the River Nile in Jinja. And a few days earlier he had been to Kapeka
where he opened a Chinese ceramics factory that will produce 40,000 square
meters of floor and wall tiles per day. Even a few days before that he visited
the $2 billion Karuma hydro electricity project that will produce 600MW of
electricity.
There is a lot happening in our country that the
priests of the new secular religion of development would cheer at. Yet there is
widespread anger, social frustration, and anxiety on social media and in
streets. Many elite commentators say the Museveni administration has gotten
worse and is doing little or nothing. They argue that people are angry because
government has failed to deliver public goods and services and jobs. I hold the
opposite view: that the anger we see is because the government has actually
been very successful in promoting economic and social change.
From the mid 1990s to the mid 2000s, I was one of the
critics of this government. My quarry was poor investment in transport and
energy infrastructure plus widespread corruption and incompetence, especially
in the army. At the time most roads were in a state of disrepair with potholes
everywhere.
Electricity was being rationed; public sector employees were being
paid wages below subsistence; the army was full of ghosts and was procuring
junk military hardware, hospitals and schools were missing, the cost of public
administration (political patronage) was taking 20% of the entire budget.
Since 2008, the Museveni administration embarked on a
huge infrastructure-building program. Only 1,200km out of the 2,200Km of paved
roads that were in good condition in 2008, today we have more than 7,000km.
From only 380MW of electricity in 2008, Uganda shall have over 2,000MW of
installed capacity by March next year when Isimba and Karuma are completed. The
UPDF is today entirely different from the army Maj. Gen. James Kazini commanded
until his removal in 2003.
In 2008, Uganda was depending on donors for nearly 50%
of her budget. Today that number is down to less than 25%. In 2008, about 65%
of the budget was going to recurrent expenses, today 60% of the budget goes to
development. On such issues as life expectancy, prevalence of malaria, child
and infant mortality, availability of drugs in public hospitals, the quality of
houses for ordinary people and the gini-coefficient (the measure of income distribution)
there was been a lot of improvement in the ten last years.
I do not want to clog this column with statistics
demonstrating quantitative and qualitative improvements in the indicators I
have referred to above. I hope the reader will trust that I am writing this on
the basis of hard data. Suffice it to say that on the most critical indicators
the Museveni government has done more in the last ten years than it did in the
first 22. Therefore, anyone following this government’s performance would refer
to the period 2008 to 2018 as its golden age. Yet for most elite Ugandans
online and on the street this is the worst period in Uganda’s history. Why?
This brings me to the central argument of this column
already highlighted in the title – chasing the wind. It is a common belief (or
assumption) among many analysts that economic prosperity leads to individual
and public satisfaction with the government seen as responsible for it. Even
Museveni believes that creating more economic opportunities and jobs for the
masses would increase public confidence in and support for his administration.
Yet on the contrary and historically, rapid economic improvement has produced
anxiety, frustration and anger among the public.
For instance, the transition from backward, poor and
feudal existence to modern, affluent industrial nations in Western Europe was
not smooth. It was accompanied by equally rapid growth in social frustrations
and public anxiety leading to the development of such ideologies and social
movements such as socialism, communism, fascism, anarchism, nihilism, terrorism
– (yes, terrorism was produced by capitalist transformation in Western Europe).
Indeed, it was in the struggle to stave off social revolution at home that the
European bourgeoisie sought colonies abroad.
The same applies to Uganda. The more successful
Museveni’s administration is in transforming the country the more it would
generate increased anger, anxiety and social frustration. If the anger is
insufficient to topple him, it is because Museveni has been less successful.
Our country remains a rural society dependent on agriculture, not industry. If
the last eight years has witness growing public anger, it is because they have
been the most successful. Holding many other factors constant, if Museveni were
to be more successful in transformation he would face a social revolution.
Of course the claim that increasing prosperity
produces anger and frustration in the masses does not hold in every society.
There are rare examples such as Singapore where increasing prosperity led to a
broad consensus among elites in favour of the growth model. The same is
happening in China today. But South Korea’s experience mirrored that of most of
Western Europe and the USA. In Africa, Ethiopia is the most successful state in
promoting rapid economic growth but is equally beset by constant protests.
Rwanda is the second best performer in Africa but has secured a broad elite
consensus in favour of its growth ambitions.
Creating more economic opportunities will not cure
widespread social frustration and anger in Uganda. The angriest critics of
Museveni are not ordinary peasants in the villages or even the much hyped
unemployed youth in towns. They are Ugandan professionals with jobs. The lesson
is that as growth picks apace, people go to schools and urban areas where they
are exposed to the outside world. Their expectations and aspirations grow
faster than the rate at which the economy can produce opportunities to satisfy
them. It is the mismatch between people’s expectations and available
opportunities that leads to social frustration, anger and anxiety.
As I have already noted with Singapore, China and
Rwanda, it is possible for economic transformation to be achieved without any
major social upheaval. But this trajectory is rare and has only been seen in a
few countries. For most of history, rapid social and economic change has
produced anger and anxiety that Uganda is unlikely to escape. In promoting
economic prosperity in the hope of containing public anger, Museveni is chasing
the wind.
****
amwenda@independent.co.ug
5 comments:
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I agree in part that education and exposure increases people's expectations. Museveni surely knows what harm he could do to his government if he fully exploited his government's capacity. He knows a desperate man is the easiest to govern.
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