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‘Ya know warram sayin?’ Nairobians are Africa’s best English speakers – study

By Leopold Obi January 29th, 2020 2 min read

Nairobi has the most English proficient speakers in the continent according to a new study.

Nairobi’s English proficiency, according to the English Proficiency Index 2019, is in the high proficiency band at 61.94 per cent, the highest for any African city at the time the survey was conducted.

The EPI index, which ranked 100 countries and regions, reported that only two African cities; Nairobi and Lagos, which scored 58.47, are in the high proficiency band.

About 13 African countries participated in the survey.

Globally, Kenya’s English language skills ranked 18th, the second highest in the continent, after South Africa that ranked sixth in the world. Nigeria and Ethiopia ranked 29th and 63rd respectively while Libya ranked the lowest.

The 2019 index saw eight new entrants in the survey namely Kenya, Sudan, Ivory Coast Bahrain, Kyrgyzstan, Maldives, Nepal and Paraguay.

VERY LOW

Africa’s average proficiency score dropped, primarily due to score changes in South Africa and Ethiopia and to the inclusion of Sudan and Cameroon which both fall in the ‘very low’ proficiency band the report said.

Another key finding of the report was that the English proficiency gender gap is closing. In 2018, womens’ average English level was higher than men’s worldwide and in a majority of countries.

But in 2019, women outscored men by less than one point in Africa, Asia and Europe

The scores are achieved through analysing results from 2.3 million adults who took an online English test in 2018 via EF Standard English Test.

Authors of the EPI report also found a correlation between high English proficiency and various indicators of economic competitiveness, including higher income and increased labor productivity.

While there’s no evidence that English proficiency directly drives economic success, the authors of the report say that the complex relationship between language skills and economic growth is that; greater wealth facilitates more English training, and English skills help economies stay competitive hence highlighting the role that English plays in broader schemes for economic growth.

DRY UP

“We consistently find a correlation between ease of doing business and a country’s English proficiency, as well as speaking English and a range of logistics-related indicators, said Kate Bell, a co-author of the survey.

The study further found a correlation between English proficiency and a country’s service exports as well as the value added per worker in services.