Opinion and Analysis
By GEORGE WACHIRA
I recall the US dollar selling at about seven Kenya
shillings in 1970. Today, the shilling’s parity against the dollar is
slowly creeping into the mid-90s.
This raises fear that unless factors devaluing our currency
are addressed, the exchange rate could soon reach the psychological
level of Sh100. This would trigger inflation in an economy heavily
dependent on imports.
There is a limit as to how much foreign exchange
the Central Bank can pump into the money markets to prop up the
currency. The longer term sustainability of the shilling’s value lies in
how much wealth the country continuously creates to maintain a strong
currency. And a wealthy nation must of necessity produce more than it
consumes, and export more value than it imports. Currently, this may not
be the case with Kenya.
The economic data released last week confirms that
imports continue to exceed exports resulting in a balance of trade
deficit. The dollar-generating sectors (tourism, agriculture and
manufacturing) slowed down in the past year. This was happening as the
country required more foreign exchange to finance essential imports for
the ongoing infrastructure development.
However it is the unrestricted imports of consumer
goods that is of major concern. Some of these consumer items can be
produced in Kenya, while others can be classified as discretionary
luxuries. Other imports are either smuggled in or are counterfeits.
Kenya is a free market economy mostly devoid of
trade controls and interventions. But this may be a lopsided and
unsustainable trade model under the current circumstances.
We need to honestly ask ourselves why this model
has not succeeded in developing critical local production capacity and
jobs. Do we need to selectively institute some painful restrictions and
fiscal penalties to reduce over-reliance on imports while supporting
increased local production capacity?
Recently Prime Minister Modi of India launched the
“Make in India” campaign to transform the country into a global
manufacturing hub by making high standard goods for exports and local
consumption. His numerous trips abroad have encouraged foreign firms to
manufacture in India.
By making in India, the country hopes to create
more local jobs and benefit from foreign technology transfer while
building national wealth. I am sure Modi will launch new policy
instruments to make this a reality.
High pitched national slogans and campaigns have
the power to create and sustain awareness, focus and commitment. The
“Buy Kenyan Build Kenya” slogan in the 1970s worked remarkably well.
Industrial areas developed in all major towns to manufacture goods and
reduce imports. Many jobs were created.
Foreign manufacturers were assisted to set up camp
in Kenya. And all this was possible because we had effective anchor
policies to initiate, nurture and protect local industrialisation. This
lasted until the trade liberalisation policies of 1990s were introduced.
Unfortunately, these were implemented wholesale without transitional
provisions.
Local manufacturing weakened as Kenya essentially
became an importing nation. Collapsed factories were converted into
import warehouses and mostly remain so to this day. Subsequently, the
agricultural sub-sectors (cotton, pyrethrum, sisal, wool, leather and
dairy farming, among others) that fed some of these industries
collapsed.
Many high value jobs gradually evaporated, and many
Kenyans disappeared into the diaspora. We have remained an importing
nation because it has become very easy to import. Further, it has become
difficult for our manufacturers to compete fairly with Asian factories
which have the benefit of lower costs driven chiefly by critical mass
and economies of scale.
In Kenya, agriculture and manufacturing play shared
economic roles. Successful agriculture generates exports, feeds local
manufacturing and processing, reduces unnecessary food imports, and
above all creates many jobs.
To move agriculture a level higher, we need to
institute effective marketing and value adding systems; introduce modern
technologies; expand irrigation infrastructure and ensure availability
of affordable credit.
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