By BD REPORTER and REUTERS
In Summary
- Kenya’s economic growth slowed to 5.3 per cent in 2014 from 5.7 per cent the previous year, hurt by a contraction in tourism and weaker agricultural output.
- Data from Economic Survey indicated that agriculture output in 2014 slowed to 3.5 per cent compared with 5.2 per cent in 2013, while earnings from tourism were down 7.3 per cent to Ksh87.1 billion ($921 million).
Kenya’s economic growth slowed to 5.3 per cent in 2014 from
5.7 per cent the previous year, hurt by a contraction in tourism and
weaker agricultural output.
Kenya has struggled with challenges that have hurt its key
foreign exchange earners, including periodic droughts that have reduced
farm output and attacks blamed on Somalia’s Al-Shabaab militants that
have hurt tourism.
The slowdown and the government’s quest to curb its growing bill
partly undermined the ability of the economy to create employment with
106,300 new jobs created last year, down from 134, 300 in 2013.
“Factors that impacted negatively on the tourism sector include
security concerns, negative travel advisories and fear of spread of
Ebola,” said Anne Waiguru, the Devolution and Planning secretary.
Ms Waiguru said increased government spending on roads and
railways had helped growth in the construction sector, but the
agriculture sector had experienced a slowdown.
Data from Economic Survey indicated that agriculture output in
2014 slowed to 3.5 per cent compared with 5.2 per cent in 2013, while
earnings from tourism were down 7.3 per cent to Ksh87.1 billion ($921
million).
Agriculture, which is the largest sector with 27.6 per cent
share of the GDP, was 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 production dropped 4.2 per cent to 39 million bags while
sugar output dropped to 6.5 million tonnes from 6.7 in 2013. The value
of marketed crops declined by 1.4 per cent to Ksh238 billion ($2.5
billion).
International visitor arrivals dropped to 1.35 million last year
from 1.52 million in 2013 and 1.82 in 2011, affected this year by a
string of deadly attacks on Kenya’s Indian Ocean coast and elsewhere,
which were blamed on Islamist militants and prompted some Western
countries to warn against travel to the country.
This has seen thousands lose jobs and more than 40 top hotels close shop due to the low bed occupancy.
The manufacturing sector slowed to 3.4 per cent compared to 5.6
per cent the previous year with the retail sector having grown 6.9 per
cent, down from 8.5 per cent in 2013.
No comments :
Post a Comment