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Geliana Maarifa

Facts, not feelings. A data-driven knowledge site about Kenya's economy and health systems — sourced from World Bank, KDHS, and peer-reviewed papers. Built because confident claims deserve actual data.

Landing Page

Landing Page

Economic Page

Economic Page

Health Page

Health Page

Budget Allocation

Budget Allocation

Insurance Coverage

Insurance Coverage

Overview

Economic Data
Is the Silicon Savannah actually a thing? Are we really overtaxed? Does Kenya's debt compare to Ghana's 2022 meltdown? Graphs, data, and very few opinions.
Health Landscape
Kenya wants Universal Health Coverage. But 74% have zero insurance, the informal sector is a “missing middle,” and NCD diagnostic capacity sits at 25%.
Cited Sources
Every chart footnotes its source — World Bank, KDHS, peer-reviewed papers. No data is pulled from thin air.

Key Features

Economic Assumptions
Data-driven deep dives into Kenya's economy — debt-to-GNI ratios, tax burden, Silicon Savannah rhetoric vs reality. Graphs, charts, and cited sources.
Economic Assumptions
Health Landscape
Kenya's Universal Health Coverage ambitions colliding with reality — 74% uninsured, a missing middle in the informal sector, and NCD diagnostic capacity at 25%.
Health Landscape
Data Visualisations
Every claim backed by interactive charts. Budget allocation breakdowns, insurance coverage distributions, and comparative metrics against Vietnam, Ghana, and SSA averages.
Data Visualisations
Actually Cited
Every chart footnotes its source — World Bank, KDHS, peer-reviewed papers. Nothing is pulled from thin air.
Comparative Pain
Kenya's numbers only sting when you see them next to Vietnam, Ghana, and the SSA average. The site curates that sting honestly.
Bias-Aware
Built to stop pulling figures out of thin air to win arguments. A personal fact-checking resource that sources actual data from Kenyan institutions.

Tech Stack

Framework
Next.js (App Router)TypeScriptTailwind CSS
Data
TanStack QueryTanStack TableRecharts
Sources
World BankKDHSPeer-Reviewed Papers

“Even a broken clock is right twice a day. Maari fa is Swahili for knowledge. I built this because I kept catching myself making confident claims about Kenya's economy and health system with nothing but vibes.”

— Stephen Telian

Built by Stephen Telian