This is more an economic discussion than it is a digital one

What he means is that the price war will deny the govt of revenues through Tax which is needed heavily to finance the new constitutions implementation

It had been predicted anyway that taxation will go up anyway since what is currently connected wont be enough...brace yourselves....

On Tue, Jan 18, 2011 at 12:09 PM, Solomon Mburu Kamau <solo.mburu@gmail.com> wrote:
On 18/01/2011, [Brainiac] <arebacollins@gmail.com> wrote:
> I seriously hope that this http://bit.ly/famTA5 is just some fanatical
> reporting at Nation Media (would not be shocked) but if so, if these words
> came out of your mouth bwana PS,
>
> THAT THE PRICE WARS IN THE MOBILE INDUSTRY MIGHT DERAIL THE NEW
> CONSTITUTION.
>
> Are you for Real? Is that not cartel behaviour right there? So now what, are
> you going to "adjust" the lowest interconnection fees upwards to normalize
> all this? so that what? Safaricom can make more money?
>
> Playing on the public with FUD now? what happened to market forces? who
> would run their company to a grind just to offer the cheapest?  Revenue
> collection? how about we first spend PRUDENTLY what we collect? how about
> ALL of us pay taxes for starters? and why not just LOWER taxes and increase
> the tax bracket?
>
> I have never been disappointed like i have on reading this.
>
> If it looks like Impunity, Smells like Impunity , guess what it is....
>

I read the story about five times to see where the lowering of the
voice calls would derail the new constitution, but I could not find
anything to that effect. I thought, in my little understanding, when
politicians failed to approve the names of people fronted for the
constitutional commissions, (Commission on the Implementation of the
Constitution and the Commission of Revenue Allocation) was the direct
derailment of the constitution. But on Mobile phones 'wars'? That's
new to me.

Safaricom also complains of Airtel's price reduction as a lead to
collapse in the industry.... how now? I thought that should be
Airtel's risk and not a threat in anyway to Safaricom's growth, in
anyway.

I think I need to get back to my books!
--
*Solomon Mbũrũ Kamau*

*****************************************************
*Man is a gregarious animal and enjoys agreement as cows will graze all the
same way to the side of a hill!*

AND

*It is better to die in dignity than in the ignominy of ambiguous
generosity! *

http://smiley2.wordpress.com
http://mburu.sikika.co.ke
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