Opinion and Analysis
In Summary
- Annual average inflation dropped from 6.5 per cent in November to 6.3 per cent in December, the lowest since November 2015.
- The FDI intelligence website indicates that a total of 84 separate projects came into Kenya in real estate, renewable and geothermal energy as well as roads and railways worth Sh102 billion – creating new jobs.
- Not many Kenyans are feeling the positive impact of these rosy statistics.
- More than six banks announced retrenchment plans in 2016.
- Kenya is currently deindustrialising with the manufacturing sector growing at a slower rate than the economy.
The election year in Kenya is contextualised in two
conflicting realities: on one hand the country is among those growing
the fastest in Africa and the world with successful record in attracting
investment.
Yet many companies have shut down their operations in Kenya
or left the country, leaving in their wake high levels of poverty and
unemployment and cost of living.
Reconciling these realities is the task that citizens, who will be called upon to elect the next economic managers have to face.
At 6.2 per cent in second quarter of the current
financial year, it cannot be denied that the Kenyan economy is growing
at a robust rate. This, in fact, is an improvement from 5.7 per cent in
Q3 of last financial year.
Juxtapose this with an African GDP growth rate of
about 1.4 per cent and a global growth rate of about 3.4 per cent in
2016 and the true picture emerges.
Agriculture, forestry and fishing; transportation
and storage; real estate; wholesale and retail trade as well as mining
and quarrying have been identified as sources of this growth.
Kenya was not only buffered from the decline of
commodities that has unsettled so many African nations, the country
saved nearly Sh50 billion in the first half of 2016 alone due to low
global petroleum prices. Besides, the Kenyan shilling remained steady
with regards to major world currencies, standing at around Sh100 to the
US dollar for most of last year.
This is important for Kenya, which is an import
economy. Currency depreciation places upward pressure on inflation,
which remained within the Central Bank of Kenya’s (CBK) target range of 5
plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.
Annual average inflation dropped from 6.5 per cent
in November to 6.3 per cent in December, the lowest since November 2015.
In addition, the country made progress on the Ease of Doing Business
Index finishing at position 92nd in 2016 up from 113 in 2015. This was
the first time in seven years that Kenya made it to the list of top 100.
Kenya’s profile as an attractive investment
destination also grew in 2016. FDI Markets ranked Nairobi as Africa’s
top foreign direct investment destination with inflows surging by 37 per
cent in 2015. Reports indicate that Kenya recorded the fastest rise in
FDI in Africa and the Middle East.
The FDI intelligence website indicates that a total
of 84 separate projects came into Kenya in real estate, renewable and
geothermal energy as well as roads and railways worth Sh102 billion –
creating new jobs for thousands of Kenyans.
More recently, auto maker Peugeot has announced a
contract to assemble vehicles in Kenya joining Volkswagen, which opened a
plant last year, Wrigleys invested Sh5.8 billion in a plant in Thika
and the government signed a contract worth Sh18.74 billion with the
French government to build a dam.
To millions of jobless and starving Kenyans
however, the reality described above seems rather too theoretical. The
fact is that not many Kenyans are feeling the positive impact of these
rosy statistics.
With regular media reports on company retrenchments
and company shutdowns, thousands of Kenyans are in fact grappling with
the exact opposite of the rosy picture above.
Last year alone, thousands jobs were lost due to
company restructuring or shut downs. Some 600 jobs were for instance
lost when Sameer Africa announced plans to close its Nakuru factory.
Flourspar Mining Company also shut down, leading to a
loss of between 700-2000 direct and indirect jobs. Oil and gas
logistics firm Atlas Development wound up operations and media houses
threw out hundreds of employees to cut costs.
Perhaps it is in the banking sector where job losses were
most pronounced. More than six banks announced retrenchment plans in
2016: Equity Bank released 400 employees; Ecobank announced it would
release an undisclosed number of employees following a decision to close
nine out of its 29 outlets in Kenya; Sidian Bank, formerly known as
K-Rep, let go 108 employees, Family Bank sent home undisclosed number of
workers and the local unit of Standard Chartered announced plans to lay
off about 600 workers and move operations to India.
The question is why this happening. How can
economic growth be juxtaposed with massive lay-offs and economic
hardship? Several factors are at play here. The employment cuts in the
banking sector are, for instance, linked to two factors -- the adoption
of technology and interest rate caps. Technology adoption has translated
meant that millions of Kenyans no longer have to visit banks to access
financial services as they can make those transactions digitally. Jobs
have become redundant as more and more transactions including money
withdrawals and transfers, loan applications and disbursement, and the
payment of bills go digital.
Secondly, the interest rate cap has placed pressure
on the profit margins of banks leading to job forfeiture. The interest
rate cap stipulates that banks cannot charge interest rates above four
percentage points of the Central Bank Rate (CBR).
Interest rate spreads have several functions for
banks, of which perhaps the most important is insulating them from bad
borrowers. There is an asymmetry of credit information in Kenya due to
the fact that the creditworthiness of most Kenyans cannot be
established.
The result is that when banks disburse loans they
often do not know if the borrower will be a good or bad one. Thus to
insulate themselves from the risk of lending to bad borrowers, interest
rates are raised in order to ensure that the bank recovers as much money
from the borrower in as short a time as possible.
In removing this provision, the interest rate cap
is essentially forcing banks to lend money to both good and bad
borrowers at the same rate. This in turn threatens profit margins as
there is a real risk that the bank now has no buffer against bad
borrowers. Some banks have effectively responded to the interest rate
cap by shedding jobs to cut down operating costs and safeguard profits.
However, the interest rate cap is having a more
insidious effect on the economy. A report by the IMF released last month
says that the interest rate controls could reduce growth by around 2
percentage points each year in 2017 and 2018.
The IMF also expects a slowdown in the growth of
private sector credit linked to the cap. Economic growth rates have been
revised downwards due to the cap.
For the average Kenyan, however, the interest rate
cap has meant that SMEs and individuals who used to access loans, albeit
at higher rates, are likely to get no credit at all.
Banks are simply not lending to individuals and
businesses they think cannot service the debt credibly at that capped
ceiling. Sadly it is the most vulnerable who are being disqualified
first as these are seen as high risk and high cost borrowers.
As they are shut out of credit SMEs cannot
implement growth plans and are unable to create jobs and wealth. The
contraction in liquidity engendered by the cap may also mean there will
be less money moving in the economy; Kenyans ultimately feel that there
is less money around, many feel more broke as they cannot get loans to
grow their business or meet personal needs.
One of the biggest factors why Kenyans don’t feel
the rosy statistics is because most operate in the informal economy,
whose performance is generally not captured in official figures.
GDP growth and Ease of Doing Business data do not
capture the reality of the informal economy where over 80 percent of
employed Kenyans earn a living.
One, therefore, cannot extrapolate positive overall
statistics as reflecting the performance of the informal economy.
Perhaps the incongruence Kenyans feel stems from the fact that the
economy from which millions earn a living is largely ignored.
The hardship and challenges of Kenyans living and
working in the informal economy continues to be neglected and thus
policies and actions that could help most Kenyans are never developed or
implemented. Until the gross negligence of the informal economy is
addressed, one can expect the average Kenyan to feel the disconnect
between economic growth and the realities of the informal economy.
Besides, the country seems to be in a ‘jobless growth’ rut
where GDP growth doesn’t lead to formal job creation. This is partly
because Kenya’s economic growth is services driven, and services produce
far less jobs than manufacturing.
Until the manufacturing sector is given the attention it requires such that economy is driven by exports of manufactured goods, the ‘jobless growth’ challenge will continue.
Until the manufacturing sector is given the attention it requires such that economy is driven by exports of manufactured goods, the ‘jobless growth’ challenge will continue.
Remember that manufacturing is under threat because
the cost of doing business for manufacturers in Kenya remains high
particularly with regards to electricity, transport, cross-county taxes
and, frankly, corruption.
Kenya is currently deindustrialising with the
manufacturing sector growing at a slower rate than the economy. The
manufacturing sector grew 3.6 percent in the Q1 and at 1.9 per cent in
Q3 of 2016 compared with a GDP growth rate of 6.2 percent in Q2 and 5.7
percent in Q3 of 2016 – meaning the share of manufacturing in GDP is
shrinking.
This should be of concern to policy makers because,
as analysts point out, industrial development is crucial for wealth and
job creation. Exacerbating the already slow growth of the sector this
year are the drought and cheap imports.
As the Kenya Association of Manufacturers has
pointed out, the drought is having an impact on raw materials in sectors
that rely on agricultural products. The drought will also lead to a
higher cost of goods and services for Kenyans as electricity tariffs are
adjusted upwards.
The manufacturing sector is also threatened by the
fact that the country has allowed the entry of cheap goods, particularly
from Asia, to flood the market. Most of these goods benefit from
protection and subsidies in their home economies which is not reflected
here. These constrain the growth of the sector in Kenya.
Finally, financial mismanagement at both national
and county levels is compromising growth. The top allegations of the
financial mismanagement of public funds according to media reports
include the laptop tendering debacle, NYS scandal, Ministry of Health
and the GDC tendering scandals. It seems that government funds that are
meant to be economically productive and generate economic activity do
not reach intended projects. Thus the economic stimulus that ought to be
garnered from public never happens because projects are either
under-financed or not financed at all as public officials siphon money
away from them.
Further, businesses routinely complain that bribes
have become a basic expectation of county officials around the country. A
report released by the Auditor General last month revealed that Kenyans
are asked to pay up to Sh11,611 by county officials. Mombasa County
topped the list of bribe-seekers followed by Embu, Isiolo and Vihiga. As
long as this continues, jobs and wealth that government investment and
financing should create will not materialise.
So what should Kenyans demand from those vying for
power in this year’s general election? The first and foremost is ending
financial mismanagement. And here the opposition is not innocent either.
Kenyans must demand a clear plan that will take
serious steps to put in place financial structures that are more robust
and punish those engaged in the mismanagement of public funds.
Secondly, Kenyans should push for the government to
provide a detailed analysis on the impact of the interest rate cap on
Kenyans and the economy.
If the analysis herein is anything to go by, Kenyans should also seek the reversal of the interest rate cap as soon as possible.
Thirdly, Kenyans ought to demand the development of
a policy aimed at supporting and developing the informal economy at
both national and county levels. The gross neglect of this sector must
end given that it is in the informal economy where most Kenyans earn a
living and are employed.
Finally, Kenyans should push for a detailed plan on
industrialisation. While the Ministry of Industrialisation has
developed the Kenya Industrial Transformation Programme, a detailed work
plan and timeline of deliverables ought to be developed and shared so
that Kenyans can reap the dividends that green industrialisation can
createAnzetse is a development economist; Email: anzetsew@gmail.com
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