By JOHN GACHIRI
In Summary
- Agriculture accounted for 27.3 per cent of Kenya’s GDP or wealth last year up from 26.4 per cent the previous year and 24.8 per cent in 2010.
- Slowdown in other key sectors has made the economy to rely on rain-fed agriculture for growth.
The structure of the Kenyan economy is returning to
its older self with agriculture cementing its dominance as sectors like
information technology (IT), real estate and financial services that
were expected to shape the country continue to shrink.
Agriculture now accounted for 27.3 per cent of Kenya’s gross
domestic product (GDP) or wealth last year up from 26.4 per cent the
previous year and 24.8 per cent in 2010.
Slowdown in other key sectors has made the economy
to rely on rain-fed agriculture for growth, exposing the it to
weather-related risks.
The IT sector’s contribution to the GDP stood at
1.2 per cent last year, down from 1.5 per cent registered in 2013 and
2.2 per cent in 2010.
The financial services remained little changed at
6.7 per cent while real estate — which is enjoying a boom due to rising
land and home prices — has shrank to 7.8 per cent of GDP from 8.3 per
cent in 2010.
The increased share of the agriculture sector — the
single largest employer — did not bode well for the fight against pay
inequality because the industry pays one of the lowest salaries.
Workers in the sector were paid an average monthly
wage of Sh19,226 last year — which was less than half the average
monthly wage in the formal sector cent of Sh46, 264 last year.
The survey shows average monthly wages for those
working in financial institutions such as banks, insurers, and asset
managers stood at Sh125,356 last year, up from Sh121,817 in 2013.
Workers in the IT sector drew an average monthly wage of Sh62,259 last
year.
Data from Economic Survey indicated that
agricultural output in 2014 slowed to 3.5 per cent compared with 5.2
percent in 2013, hurt by poor weather and reduced earnings from cash
crops.
“Low levels of rainfall resulted in decreased
production for some crops as well as pasture availability for
livestock,” noted the survey.
Maize yields dropped 4.2 per cent to 39 million
bags while sugar output fell to 6.5 million tonnes from 6.7 in 2013. The
value of marketed crops declined by 1.4 per cent to Sh238 billion.
“The inflation rate was 7.4 per cent in June 2014,
up from 4.9 per cent the previous’ years while the real average earnings
increased by 0.5 per cent compared to an increase of 10.7 per cent in
2013,” says the survey
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