The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Kenya may be growing, but ‘you can’t eat GDP’

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NAIROBI. — The timing was perfect. TWO months before Kenya’s August 8 vote, President Uhuru Kenyatta inaugurate­d the nation’s biggest infrastruc­ture project: a railway connecting the capital Nairobi and the port of Mombasa.

With pomp and ceremony Kenyatta touted the railway as proof of his campaign promises on the economy, yet at the same time the price of maize flour, a Kenyan staple, was rising fast, stoking anger, especially among the poorest.

Rising food prices constitute a crisis on the eve of a high-stakes election in which Kenyatta, and his economic record, go head to head with longtime opposition leader Raila Odinga.

“On the one hand, there’s the symbol of Kenya which continues developing — even though it means an increased debt — and remains the most dynamic economy in East Africa,” said Francis Mwangi, an analyst at Standard Investment Bank.

“On the other hand, there’s the Kenya which hardly benefits from the effects of economic growth.”

Kenyatta has put the economy at the heart of his campaign.

Thanks largely to increasing household consumptio­n and public investment Kenya has seen growth of more than five percent a year since his election in 2013.

But analysts say there is more — and less — to Kenya’s economy than meets the eye.

The country’s debt is rising, corruption is endemic and economic growth has not benefited the country’s poor, they say. Not your average African economy

As in many other African countries, agricultur­e is the dominant activity, but Kenya’s economy is atypical in other ways.

It has relatively few natural resources, but the country’s stability, economic dynamism and well-developed service industry stand out.

Kenyatta has presided over a slew of infrastruc­ture projects, including airports, roads, bridges, the start of a new port in the town of Lamu and wind and geothermal energy plants to boost electricit­y production.

Ethiopia’s larger, cheaper workforce means it recently overtook Kenya as the region’s biggest economy, but analysts say the world’s largest tea exporter remains East Africa’s most dynamic market thanks to its skilled workers, fast internet and entreprene­urial mindset.

Terror warnings and attacks, including the 2013 jihadist assault on Nairobi’s Westgate mall, scared off tourists for a while, but the country’s Internatio­nal Monetary Fund representa­tive Armando Morales said the country has since bounced back.

“Despite that, the GDP grew quite well, and conditions for business have improved,” he said.

But not all of Kenya’s progress can be credited to Kenyatta.

His term in office coincided with low oil prices and his economic policies broadly match those of his predecesso­r who kick-started some of the more eye-catching infrastruc­ture projects Kenyatta takes credit for.

Devolution has given counties more money and power, which has led to improvemen­ts in health infrastruc­ture and the constructi­on of wells and dams, said Winnie Mitulah, a developmen­t specialist at the University of Nairobi.

But government spending on new public works has caused Kenya’s debt to balloon, increasing during Kenyatta’s term to over 50 percent of GDP, much of it owed to Chinese lenders who negotiated advantageo­us terms.

“I think Kenya had to make those investment­s,” said Aly-Khan Satchu, a Kenyan analyst.

“But now, they need to reap the benefits of those investment­s, but they also need to space the next investment­s carefully.”

Observers say it’s difficult to talk about Kenyatta’s economic record without including his poor performanc­e in battling corruption.

Graft is widespread in Kenya, and while Satchu said it is difficult to tell just how deep it runs, he believes it represents a major drain on the economy. — AFP.

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