| Title | Author(s) | Language | Classification |
| Building and Securing Solid Institutions for Economic Development | Colin Bruce, World Bank Country Director Comoros, Eritrea, Kenya, Seychelles and Somalia | English | Lectures & Speeches |
Speech delivered by Mr Jan Karlsson. Minister, Development Cooporation Sweden
This Speech was delivered by Mr. Jan Karlsson Minister for Development Cooperation Sweden February 2003.
| Institute of Economic Affairs | English | Lectures & Speeches |
Speech by Dr. Sebastian Paust - Germany
The speech was presented by Prof. Sebastian Paust. He presented the speech on Germans perception on the economic situation in Kenya in 2003.
| Institute of Economic Affairs | English | Lectures & Speeches |
Speech by Dr. Christian Ruck-Germany
The Speech was presented by Dr. Christian Ruck on German Perceptions on the new political situation in Kenya in 2003
| Institute of Economic Affairs | English | Lectures & Speeches |
The State of the Nations Economy
In the 2003 lecture the Institute requested the Minister for Planning
and National Development Prof. Anyang Nyongo to make the key note address focusing on the NARC Government’s preliminary assessment of the state of the nation and to give indications on the policy priorities and the direction that the
Government would take.
| Institute of Economic Affairs | English | Lectures & Speeches |
The Constitution and the Economy
Prof. Yash Pal Gai was the chairman of the Constitution of Kenya Review Process when he made that speech. In this speech Prof. Gai discussed the
relationship between constitution and economies, and
the economic dimensions of the review of our own
constitution.
| Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA Kenya) | English | Lectures & Speeches |
Economic Policy Imperatives in the Context of Kenya's
The overarching theme of the paper is that both
the economic and constitutional reform paralysis
are manifestations of an underlying political
economy of ethno-regional inequality, which
undermines broad based political ownership of
pro-growth policy and institutional reforms, and
has allowed progressive encroachment on
domestic policy space by the Bretton Woods
institutions. The paper argues that the
fundamental imperative is one of redomesticating
the economic reform initiative, and
makes a case for a domestically negotiated
transitional economic reform programme.
| Institute of Economic Affairs | English | Lectures & Speeches |