Gov't creates taskforce on gig economy
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The government has
constituted a task force to guide and develop strategies to grow the economy
and job creation contribution to the creative/gig economy.
The task force appointed by Sports, Culture and Heritage Cabinet Secretary Amina Mohamed has
12 members and will be chaired by Charles Wambia from the State Department for
Culture and Heritage.
The task force's
primary mandate will be to develop a strategy to revitalize the creative
economy and facilitate the execution of recommendations of reports done for the
creative sector.
Further, the task force is charged with developing a tool to measure and articulate the
cultural, social and economic value of the country’s creative economy.
Additionally, the task force is expected to develop coordination mechanisms which will link
creative economy actors with the private sector, government and development
partners.
The task force has
four months to hand over its final report and recommendations.
According to a 2021
report by the Financial Sector Deepening (FSD) dubbed New Business Models for
Financing the Creative Sector Research, there are an estimated 275,375 creative
enterprises in Kenya, 44,614 of which are registered formally.
The three largest
segments of the creative economy are listed by the report as crafts, music/sound
recording and fashion design.
Lack of access to
finance is listed as the biggest challenge faced by creative enterprises with
the ventures forced to tap informal funding sources and digital loans for
growth.
The report
intimates that creative enterprises require between Ksh.100,000 and
Ksh.1,000,000 in financing, a figure exceeding the maximum amount allowable by
most digital lending platforms.
Besides finding a
cure to financial challenges faced by creative enterprises, the FSD report
recommends solutions to address the sector’s market development and
institutional constraints.
The new task force is expected to carry recommendations of reports on the sector including the FSD
survey.
While the creative
economy has no single definition, the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD) defines the space as an evolving concept which builds on
the interplay between human creativity and ideas, intellectual property,
knowledge and technology.


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