Saving misunderstood by Uganda’s majority
People continue to have a poor saving culture because saving is vaguely understood by most people. In simple language if...
Read moreDetailsPeople continue to have a poor saving culture because saving is vaguely understood by most people. In simple language if...
Read moreDetailsMany of us have at one time or another found ourselves in situations where we have to deal with a...
Read moreDetailsINSIDE THE BEEHIVE You may be secretly checking your partner’s phone. You have that strange curiosity to know the people...
Read moreDetailsThe idea of being First Lady sounds like living a life made of sugar and sunshine. Sometimes it is true...
Read moreDetailsI once wrote about short people and a short friend of mine didn’t talk to me for two weeks. I...
Read moreDetailsI have always found it hard to convince people that giving is better than receiving. But now I have a...
Read moreDetailsInside the Beehive with Isa Ssenkumba Human attraction to the opposite sex and hence marriage is the widest topic in...
Read moreDetailsWhen the topic is sex we are all on the same page. As humans our right to get intimate and...
Read moreDetailsBeing in a relationship is like being in a train, you need to know whether the train is taking you...
Read moreDetailsThe desire to understand men might be every woman’s wish. If I’m telling a lie then you don’t understand what...
Read moreDetailsThe New Economist's major concentration is on Ugandan and East African affairs, politics, and business, but it also includes regular sections on science and technology, books, and the arts.