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Labrish
Nyuuz
Uganda cashes in on gold while locals wonder what changed
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[QUOTE="Shamiso, post: 84214, member: 160"] Uganda sits on a goldmine, yet the locals stay broke while bullion shipments explode. Foreign cash flows hit nearly $5.2 billion recently, after bouncing back from a tax spat hiatus. That amount nearly equals half the national export total. Despite this massive windfall hitting Shs 18.8 trillion locally, the average citizen sees zero trickle-down benefits. Shady origins make things weirder, since President Museveni claims massive deposits exist while real mining output looks tiny. Researchers believe refineries merely process stuff smuggled from war zones, like Sudan or the Democratic Republic of Congo. Investment pro Alex Kakande points to Tanzania as the main supplier, because import data matches the outgoing shipment volumes perfectly. Job numbers look weak compared to coffee farming, which supports millions, versus just 35,000 gold workers. Big players like the Chinese-run Wagagai mine hire a few thousand, but the real loot leaves town. Laws allow foreign outfits such as Euro Gold Refinery and Simba Gold to send all earnings abroad, which stops local wealth building. The Bank of Uganda loves the metal for stabilizing the shilling and boosting reserves to record highs above $5.7 billion. But tax dodging keeps state revenues laughable at around Shs 35 billion. Most facilities like Oasis Gold Uganda lack permits for selling to Europe or America, which limits trade options considerably despite the central bank planning local purchases. [/QUOTE]
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Labrish
Nyuuz
Uganda cashes in on gold while locals wonder what changed
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