Lyla Latif
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The lure of the welfare state following decolonisation in Kenya
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Formal political independence for Kenya from British colonial rule was achieved in 1963. Yet upon its departure, the colonial administration did not leave behind a viable nation. State building was neither the original intention nor the primary objective of the colonial power. The administrative framework they had established provided the justification for economic exploitation and political domination of the newly independent Kenyan state. Even after independence, the Kenyan economy continued to be controlled and directed by its former colonial ruler. Being an outpost of international monopoly capitalism, the Kenyan economy could not help but respond to the demands of the established international market. Independence thus meant the ability to make laws within the country but not the power to change the structure of the economy or the pattern of trade with the outside world. The private sector and private investment from both domestic and external sources were given a critical role to play in the development of the country. Contrary to the claims made to its citizens by the newly independent government to set the country on a social welfare model, the government instead promoted free enterprise and foreign investment, permitting investors to export their entire profits without assessment for domestic taxation. This predisposed Kenya to a particular pattern of economic development – where the burden of taxation fell on the citizens while the benefits from domestic resource extraction that were accrued were guaranteed for foreign investors.

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Imperial Inequalities

The politics of economic governance across European empires

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