Money Markets
By NEVILLE OTUKI, notuki@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Report centres on energy, mining, telecoms, real estate, water, transport and logistics sectors.
- Investments would help unlock the economy’s potential and avoid the middle-income trap, where it stagnates at the same level.
Ongoing infrastructure projects in Kenya could
accelerate the pace of economy growth by three per cent yearly and lift
the country to a higher middle income status, a new report says.
The report on the status of infrastructure in nations in
East, South and West Africa by consultancy firm PricewaterhouseCoopers
(PwC), launched Thursday in Nairobi, highlights the role of a robust
economic hardware in powering growth.
“Improving Kenya’s infrastructure up to the level
of middle income countries, for example, would boost annual growth by
more than three percentage points,” the report reads.
Report centres on energy, mining, telecoms, real estate, water, transport and logistics sectors.
Officials said that the investments would help
unlock the economy’s potential and avoid the middle-income trap, where
it stagnates at the same level.
Tabor Almassy, East Markets Deals Leader at PwC
said that Kenya should be looking to join the ranks of upper middle
income economy by investing in sectors that would create jobs and open
new opportunities.
He said that such investments were timely to
support the ever ballooning population in the region, with a broad
youthful populace.
The report noted ongoing projects including the expected injection of 5,000 megawatts of renewable energy into the grid by 2016.
Others mentioned but are yet to come on stream
include the Lamu Port-Southern Sudan-Ethiopia Transport (Lapsset)
corridor, a million-acre Galana-Kulalu irrigation project and the
construction of 10,000km of roads.
But it also shines the spotlight on ageing power infrastructure that hurts businesses.
Kenya is undertaking multibillion-shilling projects
including the standard gauge railway with the hope of improving its
economic fortunes.
Kenya’s GDP per capita stands at Sh116,037
($1,246), slightly above the $1,045 threshold set by the World Bank for a
country to join the lower middle-income bracket.
Upper middle income nations have a GDP per capita of between $4,126 to $12,745 and high income economies at $12,746 or more.
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