Charles Mandela
JF-Expert Member
- Dec 9, 2011
- 2,752
- 2,282
It's pretty depressing how little you have bothered to research this. You are incapable of admitting that you were wrong about Magufuli. That is why we are commenting each other, until you can admit that this conversation is pointless to me.What did you really know about Mansa Musa in terms of his leadership achievements?
Unless comprehensive tax reforms are carried out intending to reduce the tax burden to all incomes calling Magufuli in superlatives is disingenuous
I will not explain to you the political similarity between what was happening and what is happening during the Magufuli's leadership.
Seems a simple minded way of looking at it. 30 minutes in and the analysis so far is mocking English accents. Uh!Laziness thinking or lazy thinking?
Glad to read a clearer response on self described religious lunatic.Religious or spiritual? The difference between the two is not merely symbolic but substantive.
Whatever your political convictions, you have to agree Magufuli is an exemplary African leader.It is always easier to applaud good intent even when it is only cosmetic but of little significance.
Our shilling continues to budge in before major currencies indicating Magufuli's vociferous stunts are not felt in the money markets.
Ports have been seriously affected with reduced volumes because of curbing of tax evasion loopholes but being deprived of comprehensive tax reforms which is the catalyst behind the tax dodging shindig one can rightly consider hitherto efforts are just unsustainable!
Tax reforms to be considered comprehensive ought to significantly reduce the number and levels of taxation. We are frazzled by pretense in this area.
Encouraging tax compliance when those taxes are extortionate and unjustifiable is trumpeting for injustice.
Watch what happens to tax reforms more than to the noises of constitution reforms to gauge whether we are progressing or backsliding