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Southern Politicians and how they view Malawi- Using the North and Centre to achieve the Southern end- Prince P Guest writer

By Prince Phwetekele- Guest Writer 12 hrs “WE WILL ALSO RULE FOR 31 YEARS” Bakili Muluzi During his hey days, at the helm of state power, Dr. Bakili Muluzi used to say the South will also rule the country for 31 years because the Central Region led the country for 31 years under Dr. Hasting Kamuzu Banda and his Malawi Congress Party. He tried all the best to destroy MCP to the core in the South by among other things going personal at Gwanda Chakuamba who was the only major remnant of the MCP in the South. He used to incarcerate the leadership of MCP (Dr. H.K. Banda, Mama C.T. Kadzamira, Hon. J.Z.U. Tembo etc) When taken aback by the unprecedented election of late Hon. Rodwell Munyenyembe to the position of speaker in 1994 and the subsequent formation of the loose alliance of MCP/AFORD in 1996, Dr. Bakili Muluzi and his UDF mooted an idea of re-demarcation of constituencies. This exercise focused mostly in the districts in the Southern Region so as to increase

respponse to the SONA -Malawi by Dr Lazarous Chakwera-Malawi Congress Party

Remarks made today in Parliament by the Leader of Opposition and MCP president Dr Lazarus Chakwera. (This was his response to President Peter Mutharika's State of the Nation Address) ----------------------------------- PREAMBLE AND EXECUTIVE SUMMARY I would like to congratulate His Excellency the President of the Republic of Malawi, Professor Arthur Peter Mutharika, for presenting the State of the Nation Address of the 45th Session of Parliament on 17th June, 2014. Mr Speaker, Sir, before I proceed with delivering my response to the State of the Nation Address allow me to convey my heartfelt congratulations to you, Mr Speaker, Sir, and your two deputies for making it to those noble positions. It is my hope and the hope of every Malawian that you will serve that position with great expertise and honesty. I also wish to congratulate all Honourable Members of Parliament for making it to this August House. Special recognition and congratulations to the newly appoin

Of subsidizing building materials as a development strategy

The Macro and micro-economic dynamics corner Of subsidizing building materials as a development strategy Greenwell Matchaya, PhD** **The author is an Economist, with expertise in macro and micro economic policy analysis   For feedback send views to matchayag@yahoo.co.uk Now that the campaign period is over (or is it not?) it is useful to switch modes from that excitement to doing the real activities that will lead to achievement of the aspirations that we collectively have as a nation. It is important to discuss real issues collectively and in an honest manner for the benefit of the nation. In this short note, we examine the subsidization of building materials which the current government maybe about to start considering for implementation as a development policy.     The DPP which is the ruling party for the current government states in their manifesto that Housing: The DPP government will introduce and implement a subsidy on cement and iron sheets to empowe

Malawi Tripartite election results -the partial picture

The results of the troubled tripartite elections in malawi are out . In general the partial view shows that Malawi will have a hang parliament where the opposition will have to be looped in for the government to pass bills. The MCP won 49 of the MPs, the DPP won 49 as well , while the PP won 26 and the UDF 14.

The Malawi Nation paper's review of the economic talk in malawi

http://www.mwnation.com/business-news-the-nation/business-review/13300-in-search-of-keys-to-malawi-ailing-economy In search of keys to Malawi ailing economy Category: Business ReviewWritten by INNOCENT HELEMA. Agriculture remains the mainstay of the Malawi economy Malawi’s macroeconomic indicators; inflation, gross domestic product (GDP) and foreign exchange reserves are all in the red. This is certainly bad news for businesses and consumers. There have, however, been efforts by government such as the Economic Recovery Plan (ERP) to be implemented over 18 months with specific reforms on monetary policy, but experts have so far argued that this might be futile. The ERP, launched about two months ago, sets targets on inflation rate to single digit, import cover to the internationally recommended three months and annual growth rate of 5.7 percent by December 2013. In the long term, however, the ERP focuses on five sectors of energy, tourism, mining, agriculture, transport
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Malawi’s Economic Recovery Plan (ERP): Short on tangible specifics

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Greenwell Matchaya, PhD Feedback to: greenwellmatchaya@yahoo.com Introduction : The current government’s effort to get the economy out of the economic problems at hand are commendable and the effort put in authoring the Economic Recovery Plan have to be celebrated as an indicator that probably someone somewhere out there is contemplating of doing something. Having said that , it ought to be said without fear of contradiction that some, if not most of the plans in the recovery plan do not appear to be founded on any solid economic/development theory or empirics. This response to the economic recovery plan is not exhaustive and must not be interpreted as an attempt to undermine government efforts in its bid to get the economy back on its ‘two’ feet, but purports to point at a number of issues that need clarifications, for the betterment of all of us. The comments below are based partially on the understanding that we are in these problems due to the economy’s fai