Cabinet Resolutions: AI, Digital Jobs and a Payroll Cleanup

Not every Cabinet decision comes with a groundbreaking ceremony or a new building on the skyline.

Sometimes, the most consequential decisions are the ones that shape how government works, how jobs are created, and how a country positions itself for the future.

Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting at State House largely focused on those kinds of systems – government efficiency, digital transformation, jobs, and Kenya’s place in an increasingly competitive global economy.

Cleaning Up Government Payrolls

One of the biggest decisions was a government-wide crackdown on payroll fraud after an audit uncovered suspected irregularities worth Ksh6.2 billion across just 12 State Departments.

Cabinet directed investigators to pursue those behind the alleged fraud, recover public funds and prosecute anyone found culpable.

The government also plans to migrate ministries and agencies onto a revamped payroll system aimed at eliminating ghost workers, duplicate payments and payroll manipulation.

The move is expected to improve accountability in public spending and reduce leakages that have historically strained government finances.

Betting on Artificial Intelligence

Cabinet also established a Standing Committee on Artificial Intelligence, which will coordinate Kenya’s AI strategy and oversee adoption of the technology across government.

Officials say the initiative is intended to support innovation, improve service delivery and prepare Kenya for the rapidly evolving digital economy.

Artificial intelligence is increasingly influencing sectors such as healthcare, finance, education, agriculture and manufacturing.

As countries race to adopt and develop the technology, Kenya is seeking to position itself as one of Africa’s emerging digital economies rather than simply becoming a consumer of global innovations.

Targeting Thousands of Digital Jobs

Another major decision was the adoption of a new National Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) Policy.

The government believes Kenya’s youthful population, English proficiency and expanding digital infrastructure give it a competitive advantage in attracting outsourced services, including customer support, data processing and technology-enabled services.

Globally, the outsourcing industry employs millions of people and generates billions of dollars annually

Kenya sees the sector as one of the key avenues for creating large-scale employment opportunities, particularly for young people entering the labour market.

The Cabinet meeting held at State House, Nairobi on Tuesday, 30th June 2026 (Image: Files)

Expanding Kenya’s Economic Reach

Cabinet also approved negotiations on a long-term economic partnership with China and endorsed petroleum cooperation agreements with Rwanda and South Sudan.

At the same time, Nairobi will host the Secretariat of the Alliance of African Multilateral Financial Institutions, further strengthening Kenya’s profile as a regional financial and diplomatic centre.

These agreements are expected to deepen trade relations, improve investment opportunities and reinforce Kenya’s ambitions of becoming a strategic economic hub for East and Central Africa.

Goals

Viewed together, the decisions taken at Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting point to a broader theme:

Economic transformation increasingly depends on systems that work.

Cleaning up public payrolls, preparing for artificial intelligence, creating digital jobs and strengthening international partnerships may not always dominate public attention.

Yet these are the building blocks that increasingly define competitive economies.

And as conversations around a First World Kenya continue, the challenge is becoming more about building efficient institutions, embracing new technologies and creating opportunities that can sustain growth over the long term.

Gusii Stadium Upgrade Signals Shift in Sports Investment

Odds are that your local stadium is a sorry sight. It’s probably nothing more than a dusty, tired pitch with empty terraces.

Maybe, a few kids kicking a sisal ball on a grassed section between makeshift goal posts.

But, you can easily spot talent and potential in those boys – barefoot notwithstanding.

The problem is – they are trapped in an unforgiving environment.

Now picture that same ground, rebuilt – with a proper turf, lights on, the stands full with a roaring crowd.

There’s an intoxicating wave of crowd energy, for a local derby is going down this weekend.

Fancy, uh?

It’s not a fairy tale. We are talking about Kisii, and in particular – Gusii Stadium.

President Ruto and other guests during the breaking ground for the 14,000-seater Gusii Stadium (Image: Files)

The redevelopment of Gusii Stadium is already underway – a massive Ksh1 billion project set to deliver a 14,000-seater facility.

The new, state-of-the-art facility comes complete with a FIFA-standard pitch and an eight-lane athletics track.

It’s part of a wider push that also includes projects like Talanta Sports City Stadium and the rollout of over 25 new or upgraded sports facilities across the country.

Well, it can easily be downplayed as mere infrastructure.

But, if you’ve been following sports long enough, you’ll know it’s never just about the structure.

Once a proper stadium comes up, things start to move differently.

The training improves, local and regional fixtures start happening. This, in turn, pulls in club scouts – that kind of attention always brings the spotlight.

Soccer talents aside, a proper stadium brings a lot of business around it.

The transport sector opens up, the crowds need food – heck, the ripple is felt even in the clothes business.

The dusty, barren field stops being idle.

Kisii is a quiet town that doesn’t often make the news. This kind of infrastructure brings instant transformation.

At Gusii Stadium, talent has never really been the issue. What’s been missing is the environment to carry that talent forward.

Of course, a stadium on its own doesn’t guarantee anything.

We’ve seen good facilities built with huge resources go quiet before – locked gates, ghostly corridors and dilapidated pitches.

So, the real test won’t just be in the construction, but in what follows.

What systems are there to keep it running? How does it support local talent?

As things are, Gusii Stadium holds the promise of remaining relevant, and nurturing – not just a one-day headline.

This project remains another footnote in the conversation around that ‘First World Kenya’ dream.

The endgame (no pun intended) is not just in flashy highways and skylines – but in conducive, intentional spaces where young gifts and talents are nurtured.

Ghafla!
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