- Kenya posts stronger-than-expected Q1 growth at 5.3% on manufacturing rebound, tourism boom
- China’s new investment rules are about guardrails, not closed doors
- Zanzibar optimistic economic growth will hit 7.5% on tourism boom
- Kenya defies economic shocks to post record $22 billion in tax collections
- Forget South Africa: East Africa now rules in banking industry returns
- Lamu over Tanga: The commercial calculus that cost Tanzania $20bn refinery
- Kenya’s markets regulator opens the door, but can the investors walk through?
- Tourism Infrastructure as Economic Catalyst: Lessons from East Africa’s Hotel Development Boom
Business
East Africa has become a key frontier for economic expansion so as to have a balance of power against the West and as a…
The market share of Tanzania tea is gaining ground globally.…
People have been told for a long time that the…
Kenya Breweries Limited (KBL) has launched a campaign to recruit over 5,000 new farmers to…
Uganda, Nigeria and DRC are the latest beneficiaries of a multinational project initiated by the…
The rising commodity prices, surging inflationary pressures, and the contracting global financial situation have risked African trade and production capabilities. Moreover, the rising threat of sovereign defaults poses a severe risk to the growth of African trade. Thus, African trade prospects remain unclear, considering the challenging global economic scenario.
The Covid-19, energy and food shortages have hit with the countries having minimal or no policy space to respond. As a result, African countries have fallen into a real risk of debt distress and even possibilities for sovereign debt default.
New Zimbabwe went on to report that the court ruled that in the case of First Merchant Bank failing to reimburse Shah and his company, the Bank of Zambia was held liable and, in the alternative, the Attorney General was ordered to pay if the funds could not be found. The culmination of this dispute is that Shah and his company are in for a particularly large windfall of cash. The reclusive Indian business tycoon is said to have business interests in Zimbabwe, Zambia, and India.
Despite his wins in business Jayesh Shah has never successfully shaken off the controversy that comes from the notable success a person enjoys in any endeavour. Success always breeds as many admirers as it does critics. Tendai Biti, who was Zimbabwe’s finance minister at one time during the Government of National Unity, called Jayesh Shah a “loan shark of Indian descent”.
The opposition leader made this highly disparaging remark after revelations that Jayesh Shah and another equally controversial business, Nicholas van Hoogstraten were providing cash loans to Zimbabweans against their immovable properties on unsustainable and usurious terms when the inevitable eventuality of default occurred by the borrowers, the lenders Jayesh Shah and Nicholas van Hoogstraten would move in and realize the property against which the original loan was secured.
The world largely considers Africa as the next great growth market, a designation that has persisted for years. There are several reasons to be optimistic: the African continent has some of the world’s youngest populations, promises to be a key consuming market over the next three decades, and is becoming more mobile phone-enabled. Because access to smartphones and other devices improves consumer information, networking, job-creating resources, and even financial inclusion, a rising digital ecosystem is especially important as a multiplier of heightened economic growth.
Banks in Africa generally and in South Africa especially weathered the perfect storm caused by…
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Recent Posts
- Kenya posts stronger-than-expected Q1 growth at 5.3% on manufacturing rebound, tourism boom 14.07.2026
- China’s new investment rules are about guardrails, not closed doors 14.07.2026
- Zanzibar optimistic economic growth will hit 7.5% on tourism boom 13.07.2026
- Kenya defies economic shocks to post record $22 billion in tax collections 10.07.2026
- Forget South Africa: East Africa now rules in banking industry returns 09.07.2026
- Lamu over Tanga: The commercial calculus that cost Tanzania $20bn refinery 09.07.2026
- Kenya’s markets regulator opens the door, but can the investors walk through? 08.07.2026
- Tourism Infrastructure as Economic Catalyst: Lessons from East Africa’s Hotel Development Boom 08.07.2026
- Is Dubai cleaning dirty gold and blood diamonds from DRC? 06.07.2026
- Tanzania: Will mining tax exemption benefit nation or a handful of leaders? 06.07.2026



























