Money Markets
A vehicle that was targeted by terrorists in Nairobi last Sunday. Photo/FILE
By Geoffrey Irungu, girungu@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Kenya's economic growth seen missing the 6.2pc target if the rains do not fall and attacks continue.
- President Uhuru Kenyatta’s government has made public its intention to increase the pace of growth to 6.2 per cent this year – its first full calendar year in office.
- But analysts see the twin risks as continuing to pose a major challenge to the Jubilee government’s ambitions in the coming months.
Bad weather and sustained terrorist attacks have
cast a dark cloud over Kenya’s quest to expand its economy by 6.2 per
cent this year, analysts said.
Kenya’s farming belt that covers Central and North
Rift, and the Western region has received lower than normal rainfall in
the past couple of months that usually marks the onset of long rains
and the main planting season, putting a damper on growth prospects.
On Tuesday, the Department of Agriculture warned
that the production of maize could fall by up to 5.8 million bags if the
prevailing weather conditions persist.
Director of crops Johnston Irungu said that
should the unfavourable weather conditions persist to the end of the
week, most maize fields will be adversely affected diminishing the
output.
“Unless rainfall pattern improves before the end
of the week, we are estimating that between 15-20 per cent of the
projected national output of 29 million bags will be affected,” said Mr
Irungu.
Agriculture is Kenya’s single largest productive
sector whose performance has traditionally determined the overall
health of the economy.
Its reliance on rain has, however, remained a big
window of exposure that the government has tried to fix with the shift
to irrigation.
Insufficient rains are also a threat to the supply
of the cheaper hydro-electric power that forces the country to rely on
expensive thermal power.
Kenya is also struggling with a major security
threat in key sectors such as retail outlets and public transport that
have come under sustained attacks from the Somalia-based Al-Shabaab
terrorist group.
The terrorists captured global attention last
September with a deadly attack on a Nairobi mall that left more than 60
people dead and have since continued intermittent attacks on churches
and public transport vehicles killing more than 20 people since
January.
Besides the rising number of casualties, the
attacks are seen to have a negative impact on key sectors of the economy
such as tourism, which lost 2.1 per cent of its earnings last year as
tourist arrivals diminished in the wake of security threats.
President Uhuru Kenyatta’s government has made
public its intention to increase the pace of growth to 6.2 per cent this
year – its first full calendar year in office.
But analysts see the twin risks as continuing to
pose a major challenge to the Jubilee government’s ambitions in the
coming months.
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