By NEVILLE OTUKI, notuki@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
The weakening of the Kenyan currency helped Nairobi
improve its standing on the list of the world’s most expensive cities
for expatriates, a new report says.
The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) cost of living survey
that was released last week ranks Nairobi at position 78 compared with
69 last year, meaning Kenya’s capital became less expensive for expats.
Nairobi is home to the United Nations Environment
Programme (Unep), multinational companies and embassies with diplomats,
international civil servants and employees being paid in hard currencies
such as the US dollar and the Euro.
“With the falling cost of oil and a strong US
dollar pushing down prices, local inflation has been relatively low
across the US. Given that the ranking uses New York as base city, most
cities have also become relatively cheaper,” the report says.
The study, which compares prices of goods and
services such as food, home rents, transport, utility bills, private
schools and recreational costs, involved 133 cities.
The shilling shed about 16 per cent to the dollar
last year due to falling revenues from tourism, tea and horticulture —
Kenya’s key foreign exchange earners — amid a rising import bill.
The Kenyan currency hit a low of Sh106 in September
compared to Sh90 in January last year. It is currently trading at Sh101
to the greenback.
A weak Kenyan unit has the effect of inflating
dollar, pound and Euro-denominated salaries of expats who are finding it
easier to foot their bills the local unit.
This made expatriates in Kenya among the biggest winners of the weakening of the shilling against the US dollar.
It means that while an expat on a monthly salary of
$5,000 took home Sh450,000 in January last year when the shilling was
at Sh90, the same amount rose to about Sh510,000 in December on the
account of exchange rate fluctuations alone, representing a pay increase
of 13 per cent against an average inflation rate of about seven per
cent.
That translates into higher purchasing power for an
expatriate living in Kenya than their counterparts who are stationed,
for instance, in New York on the same salary.
Kenya’s rate of inflation ranged between 5.61 per
cent and 8.01 per cent last year. The cost of living measure last month
eased to 6.84 per cent from 7.78 per cent in January on falling food and
petroleum prices.
Improved ranking of the Kenyan capital should in
the near term ease pressure for wage increments on United Nations
agencies, diplomatic missions and multinationals.
It also determines the city’s ability to attract and retain foreign investment, expatriates and tourists.
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