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Inside Museveni’s 34 years

As a result of stability and sustained growth, Uganda has been able to provide an increasing basket of public goods and services to her citizens – roads, schools, hospitals, dams, water-treatment plants alongside healthcare, education, clean water and electricity.

While many Ugandans (and other African elites generally) expect these public goods and services to be of high quality and widely spread, public revenues in our country are too low to satisfy these expectations. Ugandans are dissatisfied with the state, not because the country is not improving its ability to serve them, but because their expectations grow much faster than state capacity. Increased revenue has also given Museveni more resources to buy off opponents, reward his loyalists and equip the army and police to crack down on those who dissent.

What then have been Museneni’s major failures? The source of his economic failure is in the nature of alliance he built during the reconstruction phase. The president allied with Western powers. This allowed him to access Western financial assistance but on condition that Uganda allows western direction of the policy-making, policy orientation and policy implementation process. Consequently public policy was heavily tilted in favour of multi national capital. As a result local capital was either displaced or its growth stifled through policies such as privatization, liberalization and deregulation. Thus today the commanding heights of economy  – telecommunications, banking, manufacturing, etc. – are under the control of foreign capital.

On the political front, Museveni’s other major failure has been inability to organize a transition of power from him to the next generation or next president. This is especially important in a country that has never seen a peaceful transfer of power from one government to another or from one president to another. For as long as there is no such a peaceful transition, it remains to be seen whether the stability he has created can outlast him. In fact this long rule has stifled the evolution of institutions that can act independent of how he personally exercises power. This leaves us a vulnerable state.

Hence, the longer Museveni has stayed in power, the more monarchical his rule has become. Today authority continues to be transmitted from the president (through personal relations) to his close associates such as family, relatives and personal friends and from them to other associates related by personal ties of their own. This is because the longer he governs the more perverse his personal influence on the state gets and therefore the more dependent on him our national institutions become. This has created a real risk that without him the state could again disintegrate. As Museveni and NRM celebrate 34 years, this is the issue to ponder.

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4 comments

  1. For his economic shortcomings, these economic disasters can best be viewed like a situation where the patient dies after a successful operation! One thing the musevenis gotta admit is that the revolution is a spectacular failure. You can’t put it better honest Enterprise has been effectively crowded out. Just view the top 100 taxpayers ten years ago. Thanks.

  2. Great analysis on M7 rule Andrew. It has been a long time since I praised any idea you put in here but I think all credit is due. M7s refusal to leave power will be his own undoing. All the benefits he brought to Uganda will come to nought. Just look at his compatriot in Angola. This is what M7 fears and this will what will be his end.

  3. 1. A bird in hand is worth two in the bush;For now Ugandans are still better off under the NRM Regime.Do we have another alternative? we dont for now actually; the youth of Uganda with their Representative Bobi Wine have really embarrassed themselves before the world( i just dont know where to begin from)
    2.90% of the food, drugs,textile,leather,plastic,electronics,sanitary ware,construction materials that Ugandans consume are manufactured in Uganda .The wives and children of Ejakaakit and and Rajab wear clothes made in Uganda which is a good thing.
    3.Andrew really loves his African women we thank him for sharing a link that recognized Uganda women as one of the most enterprising in the world although there are some women who embarrass us can you imagine some women are paid 2000/=for sex and taken to to lodges on bicycles.

  4. One more failure, that is catastrophic. Tribalizing the elite forces that guard the presidency. Museveni’s tribesmen contribute over 80% of the SFC, the presidential guard. Even if they were highly educated, I do not see how they do not mutiny the leadership of another president who isn’t a Muhima. This is recipe for disaster. Perhaps you have not mentioned this in your column because the former boss is your good friend, and as such you hold hopes similar to those of people close to him, in a post Museveni era.

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