More uneducated men own homes than graduates

mzeiya

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Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) newly appointed Director General, Macdonald Obudho during the handover ceremony on November 2, 2020. PHOTO | LUCY WANJIRU | NMG

More uneducated men in Kenya own a house than those that have attended middle-level colleges and universities a new survey suggests.

The Demographic and Health Survey 2022 released by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) on Tuesday shows 46.7 percent of men who own a house have no formal education, compared to 32.2 percent that have gone beyond secondary school.

A similar pattern plays out for their female counterparts with the data showing 10 percent of house owners are women with no formal education compared to 3 percent that have gone up to tertiary level.

This could be a reflection of the rural-urban migration patterns where educated Kenyans end up in urban areas in search of jobs, where they end up renting or unable to afford homes while their counterparts in rural areas build their houses.

The data shows that 20 percent of uneducated men jointly own a house with a wife or someone else compared to 36.3 percent of their female counterparts.

Overall, 45 percent of men aged between 15 and 49 years own a house compared to 33 percent or less than a third of women under the same age bracket.

“Women in rural areas (44 percent) are more likely to own a house than women in urban areas (17 percent), although women in urban areas are much more likely to have a title deed for the house they own than women in rural areas,” says the Kenya Demographic and Health Survey (KDHS) data.

House ownership is highest among women aged 45 to 49 years at 63 percent and among men aged 50 and 54 years at 88 percent.

The KNDH report shows 43 percent of men who own a house alone are in rural areas while 21 percent are in urban settings.

The same data shows that 37 percent of women that jointly own a house are in rural areas while 15 percent are in urban settings.

According to the 2019 Census report, 73.8 percent of rural dwellings have mud, timber, iron sheets or other inferior materials as the main walling material, highlighting their inferior quality.

The Censors report further shows most houses in rural homes have earth, sand or cow dung as the main flooring material.

The KNDH report shows 25 percent of women own agricultural land compared to 24 percent of men that own land.

Article 40 of the Kenyan Constitution which took effect in August 2010, gives women equal rights to land ownership as men.

Women also automatically become joint landowners with their spouses upon marriage under Article 45(3).

“The likelihood of women who own agricultural land having the title deed in their name increases with increasing wealth, from four percent among women in the lowest quintile to 33 percent among those in the highest quintile,” said the report.

Land ownership in Kenya is usually vested in fathers who customarily pass it on to their sons, making it hard for women to secure rights except through their husbands.

The KNDH report which contains key demographic indicators for the country is released every five years. The last report was published in 2014, with the latest one experiencing delays due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

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PS ~ Quite informative info in the tweet below
 
I wonder why, apart from Western Kenya, we do not use red-soil bricks for construction. Saw a huge part of Uganda use them too.
Inferior product! Hizo wewe huona hazina tofauti kubwa na matope.
Good quality burnt clay brick with low permiability requires some serious temperatures in the kiln. A well insulated kiln and fuel makes the product more expensive as compared to machine cut blocks in areas that are close to good quarries.
Why struggle with bricks when you can buy a machine cut stone for 40bob or less? Building material choice normally boils down to economics
 
While others keep on procrastinating till it’s the “right time” to build which is actually a mirage. The right time to start building is now, with the little money available, not when one envisages they will have huge amounts of money.
This is a lesson many learnt the hard way at the height of the pandemic, myself included and now I can't stop dreaming about the next project and the one after that 😅
 
Do we have a Q.S here, afanye advice, hizi guides hukaa poa on paper, shida ni they put a developers mind on a straight jacket thinking ni +/- 5%, mistake ikuwe you are borrowing funds, unaweka mabati and you run out of funds. For starters, nyumba hapo iko na precast concrete ballustrades, haziko kwa hiyo cost breakdown. Lots of external paint, nothing in the breakdown.......

Best thing is to do a BoQ, a home made one for starters where the specs of all materials are defined (hapa ndio mambo huwa, unaona hizo milango at least 7 anasema za 100k, what type of door, framing, hinges, locks.... are they?) So wanaume, kama wewe ni mtu unapenda planning, forecasting, a taste for the best your budget allows, do you own excel sheet

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Do we have a Q.S here, afanye advice, hizi guides hukaa poa on paper, shida ni they put a developers mind on a straight jacket thinking ni +/- 5%, mistake ikuwe you are borrowing funds, unaweka mabati and you run out of funds. For starters, nyumba hapo iko na precast concrete ballustrades, haziko kwa hiyo cost breakdown. Lots of external paint, nothing in the breakdown.......

Best thing is to do a BoQ, a home made one for starters where the specs of all materials are defined (hapa ndio mambo huwa, unaona hizo milango at least 7 anasema za 100k, what type of door, framing, hinges, locks.... are they?) So wanaume, kama wewe ni mtu unapenda planning, forecasting, a taste for the best your budget allows, do you own excel sheet

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Very impressive sire.
What I know about the guy who we've been friends on Facebook for like a decade now is that he is a kienyeji fundi but with a vast experience especially building in rural coast using interlocking blocks.
 
Very impressive sire.
What I know about the guy who we've been friends on Facebook for like a decade now is that he is a kienyeji fundi but with a vast experience especially building in rural coast using interlocking blocks.

Hio kazi si yangu, a Q.S I have worked with, thats why I redacted the rates.

Well and good, but fundi na cost escalation
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na sio ati he is being malicious, kuna vitu tu zilimpita
 
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What is the rate QS should ideally charge for their services
Now, a q.s works best when paired with an architect na kama nyumba ina gorofa ongeza structural eng., then kama your mechanical electrical installations si your run of the mill sockets, bulbs na pipe ya maji baridi, ongeza M&E engineer. The architect and engineers do design and provide the q.s with a specs & quantities.
Depending on your project intricacies, rarely do the fees of the whole team exceed 10% of project cost. if the project has repeating units, e.g typical floor slab in a high rise development or typical house in an estate development then discounts are calculated accordingly.
Back to your question, Q.S pekee, kitu 2%-3%
 
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