We are seeing growth. The hands-on experience has given us confidence in the graduates we churn out to the hospitality sector. The skills we are providing are demand-driven. We have grown to become a centre of excellence in tourism. The support we have been receiving from the support from well-wishers and friends of good will have enabled us to train 135 students. These students have spread their services across Kenya,” said Amos Onyango .
this number has always been much lower. “Therefore, the perception is changing,” he stresses. “It is all about the equipment. It is all about how we are also changing the curriculum so that it is developed by the industry, such that the skills produced are very relevant to the market.”
.A series of severe and mutually reinforcing shocks — the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine and resulting food and energy crises, surging inflation, debt tightening, as well as the climate emergency — battered the world economy in 2022. Against this backdrop, world output growth is projected to decelerate from an estimated 3.0 per cent in 2022 to 1.9 per cent in 2023, marking one of the lowest growth rates in recent decades.