Friday, June 21, 2024

Listen to what Gen Z is saying. Hear them.

Kenyan Gen Z seized the moment that was made for them and threw down the gauntlet at the feet of the Kenyan State. With the memory of the bitter betrayal by Parliament in 2023, Kenya's youngest adults were not going to let the Finance Bill mortgage their futures to an economic promise they had every reason to believe would not be kept. The signs that they were onto something were everywhere, least not being the details of the Finance Bill itself that proposed to tax the ever living snot out Gen Z even before they had a chance to earn a proper living.

Gen Z members of Parliament were offered the opportunity to keep faith with their brethren outside Government, and some of them didn't have the backbone and moral clarity to take a stand. One of the most disappointing parliamentarians is Linet "Toto" Chepkorir. When called upon, she had little of use to say about the Finance Bill and voted for it at the Second Reading. She had shown so much promise when she campaigned for the Woman Representative seat of Bomet at the last general election but since taking office, she has behaved in the same exact way as the venal and avaricious old-timers she found in the Augean Stables that are the chambers of the National Assembly. Should the opportunity present itself, the good and sensible peoples of Bomet County should recall her from office and elect someone else with a better moral fibre.

However, regardless of the way parliamentarians continue to betray the youth of Kenya, Gen Zs appear to be taking their first definitive steps in shaping their now destiny, and the protest they have mounted against the Finance Bill appears to have their full-throated support, even if it might end in tragedy, as the police killing of Rex Kanyike Masai shows. They do not appear to be in a mood to back down and the arguments they have marshalled against the Bill continue to discombobulate senior officers of the Government.

The President appears to find himself in the same uncertain place his predecessor did in the end-stages of their first term. He has articulated his economic recovery plans for the nation on many occasions in many forums, but few people seem to believe him when he says he has the people's interests at heart. Certainly, going by the rageful language deployed by some of the anti-Finance-Bill protesters, Gen Z does not take the President at his word and would rather the Finance Bill in its current form be binned and everyone starts the budget process from scratch. They are not necessarily wrong.

Well-meaning "adults" with very good English have been deployed across many media platforms to explain why Gen Z is wrong about the Bill, about the economy, about the President and about the Government's economic plans for them. We have been reminded about the "deadline for passing the budget" and terrorised with threats of dire consequences if the "budget is not passed on time". This kind of scaremongering is quite tedious, to be honest.

If we fail to pass the budget by the 30th of June, I promise you, the world will not end and Kenya will not die. The Government will face serious difficulties in its spending plans, but I promise you, really, the Government will not fall, the sky will still be up there, and the men and women wringing their hands in fear will adjust. Search through the text of the Constitution and I promise you, there is no mention of a June 30th deadline or a mandatory requirement to enact an annual Finance Bill. The only constitutional requirement regarding the Government's spending plans is that they must be approved by the National Assembly. The only Money Bill that MUST be approved by Parliament in order for the Government to spend taxpayers' money is the Appropriation Bill.

Do not miss the forest for the trees. The Finance Bill is not THE tax law. The tax laws are the Value Added Tax Act, Income Tax Act, Excise Duty Act, Miscellaneous Fees and Levies Act, East African Community Customs Management Act and the Stamp Duty Act. They are the laws that impose taxes on income, business activities and commodities and services bought, sold, imported into and exported out of Kenya. The Finance Act is merely a tool for varying and changing the rates of tax. That's it. 

If the tax rates remain unchanged year on year, the Government will not fall. It's will still continue to collect tax. The only thing it will need to spend those taxes is the approval of the National Assembly - given through the Appropriation Bill. So, perhaps, we should listen to Gen Z. They may have none of the sophisticated English being deployed against them, but they are saying something worth listening to.

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