Lethukuthula Khozah

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Lethukuthula Khozah

Lethukuthula Khozah

@LethueK

Economist |Aspiring Philanthropist|Lethukuthula foundation founder| Chairman at YoungkingGroup |DynastyCapitaInvestor |Crypto&Forex trader| Quant|Author |

@ Bulawayo Katılım Mayıs 2018
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Lethukuthula Khozah
Lethukuthula Khozah@LethueK·
Every African should start the year by understanding where we come from and where we’re going. The African Renaissance challenges us to think deeply about Africa’s economic systems, leadership gaps, and the mindset that shapes our future as a continent. This book isn’t about blame it’s about responsibility. If we want sustainable growth, wealth creation, and dignity, we must first change how we think. Reading is where transformation begins. 📘🌍 You can get the book at 👇 scribd.com/book/970308024…
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Lethukuthula Khozah
Lethukuthula Khozah@LethueK·
@baba_nyenyedzi Exactly. When the state guarantees private losses, it distorts markets and socializes risk. Our Government should create an enabling environment not insure private profits at the expense of taxpayers.
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Tinashe
Tinashe@baba_nyenyedzi·
The first question is a simple one: if a private business makes a loss, why should GoZ guarantee it? Too many of these deals are done quietly, with very little public scrutiny, yet the public carries the risk. If solar projects make sense, let them sell power at the price they judge viable, in USD if necessary and compete on proper commercial terms. GoZ’s role should be to level the playing field, not to guarantee private returns. Give tax incentives, fix regulation, improve grid access and let the market be the market. The fuel sector is the obvious example. No fuel company is guaranteed against losses. They price risk, manage shocks and operate without a sovereign safety net. The real trouble comes when these guarantees go bad and are converted into Treasury Bills. Then the loss does not disappear. It is pushed onto taxpayers, rolled over into the future and used to distort already thin capital markets. We have seen this before with Command Agriculture and legacy TBs. Zimbabwe should stop manufacturing private certainty today in exchange for public crisis tomorrow. We already have too many unpaid rolled over TB’s to add some more….
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Changamire
Changamire@shonapapi·
Name a huge scam.
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Lethukuthula Khozah
Lethukuthula Khozah@LethueK·
Africa has resources, talent, and a growing population, but without strong systems to convert these into productivity, growth will remain inconsistent. I believe real Development is not about having potential it’s about building institutions and policies that turn that potential into real, measurable outcomes. Yet in many cases, our own policies end up hindering growth rather than enabling it, and we often tolerate unequal and inefficient distribution of resources. Until policy aligns with productivity and fairness, progress will continue to fall short of potential.
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Penuel The Black Pen
Penuel The Black Pen@penuelist_·
What is the best piece of financial advice you've ever received?
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Lethukuthula Khozah
There are interesting geopolitical signals emerging ahead of the upcoming summit in Evian-les-Bains. South Africa is reportedly out, and Kenya is now representing Africa. While official explanations vary, the broader pattern from G20 tensions to shifting diplomatic dynamics suggests a changing global posture toward African representation. What stands out to me is the growing positioning of Kenya. Kenya has, over the past decade, steadily built a reputation as a stable, business-friendly, and forward-looking economy. Its strength in fintech, regional trade, and diplomacy has made it increasingly visible on the global stage. This moment may reflect something deeper: Africa’s global representation is gradually shifting toward countries that are seen as: •Economically open •Digitally progressive •Regionally influential In that sense, Kenya is not just stepping in it is emerging as a new face of Africa in global economic and political conversations.
Lethukuthula Khozah tweet mediaLethukuthula Khozah tweet media
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Lethukuthula Khozah
A gross misunderstanding of both economics and the point I was making. An average teacher in South Africa earns roughly R15,000–R25,000 per month, which is far from the “average” implied by GNI per capita. But importantly, civil servants still retain meaningful purchasing power, unlike in Zimbabwe where teachers earn around $300 despite a GNI per capita of about $2,000. And the fact that millions receive social grants also tells you something important the economy is large and structured enough to generate tax revenue to sustain that fiscal system.
Iam YindaTe@TendayiG2023

@LethueK South Africa’s GNI per capita is ~$6,100 but ~28 million people rely on grants. That’s the problem with averages: they hide inequality. Economic growth ≠ equal benefit. A bigger economy doesn’t mean more money in everyone’s pocket.

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Lethukuthula Khozah
Lethukuthula Khozah@LethueK·
Every African should start the year by understanding where we come from and where we’re going. The African Renaissance challenges us to think deeply about Africa’s economic systems, leadership gaps, and the mindset that shapes our future as a continent. This book isn’t about blame it’s about responsibility. If we want sustainable growth, wealth creation, and dignity, we must first change how we think. Reading is where transformation begins. 📘🌍 You can get the book at 👇 scribd.com/book/970308024…
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