From left: Planning and Devolution secretary Mwangi Kiunjuri, Kenya
National Bureau of Statistics acting director- general Zachary Mwangi
and chairman Terry Ryan during the release of the Economic Survey 2016
in Nairobi recently. PHOTO | SALATON NJAU
By GEORGE WACHIRA
In Summary
Browsing through the Economic Survey 2016, one sees
an economy with most of the key sectors marginally growing and with a
macroeconomic environment that is mostly stable.
The monetary policies have evidently stabilised the exchange rate and inflation, while runaway interest rates are on the mend.
Informal sector jobs are growing while the social
indicators (education and health) are positive. However at 5.6 per cent
growth rate in 2015 the economy is still far from reaching the peak of
its potential.
The positive impact of low global oil prices on the
economy over the past two years is quite evident with an improved
balance of payment, reduced inflation and, of course, low energy cost
inputs.
Petroleum consumption rose by about 20 per cent
from 3.9 million tonnes in 2014 to 4.7 million tonnes in 2015. The oil
import bill dropped by 26 per cent from Sh309 billion in 2014 to Sh229
billion in 2015.
Was it an ‘opportunistic’ economic growth assisted
mainly by low oil prices? If the answer is in the affirmative we need to
focus on ways to drive sustainable ‘real’ growth even when oil prices
revert to high levels, as they will do.
In respect of electricity, demand grew by an
impressive 9.7 per cent while installed generation capacity increased
from 1,723 megawatts (MW) in 2013 to 2,263 MW in 2015.
This is an indication that the “stretched” target
of 5,000MW by 2017 has challenged the energy gurus to keep supply ahead
of demand.
This way there is sufficient buffer for electricity
supply to ensure that no socio-economic development shall ever stall or
delay waiting for power. The latent electricity demand that energy
economists talked about is gradually surfacing as supply and
distribution expand.
At 6.2 per cent growth in 2015, agriculture was one
of the good performers with increased produce and values. However this
was mostly due to good rains, high international prices and low energy
cost inputs, items not within our influence.
Agriculture being Kenya’s “core” economic sector
should be growing in double-digit figures if we are to meet our national
GDP growth targets. It is the sector with the highest capacity and
potential to achieve long term national prosperity.
However to walk the talk, the national and county
governments will need to routinely allocate sufficient budgets for
agriculture. Produce marketing systems should be expanded and made
efficient to motivate farmers and herders.
Manufacturing performed lowly at 3.5 per cent in
2015, and this is despite low cost of energy inputs. This is another
productive sector with huge transformational potential to the economy.
We have observed ongoing activity to set up basic
capacity and institutions for small and large-scale industrialisation
which is the logical starting point.
There is also evidence that manufacturing is now
focusing on bottom-up value addition of the other productive sectors
like agriculture , livestock, forestry, and minerals.
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