India’s exports to Kenya are largely pharmaceuticals, steel, machinery and automobiles. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Imports of goods from India hit a seven-year high in 2018 as the
Asian country played catch-up with rival China, whose orders declined
by 5.35 percent in the period.
Trade data released by
the Central Bank of Kenya shows consignments worth nearly Sh185.15
billion were bought from India, a growth of 8.65 percent over Sh170.41
billion in 2017.
India’s exports to Kenya are largely pharmaceuticals, steel, machinery and automobiles.
New Delhi has been playing catch-up with China, which took the
position of top seller to Kenya in 2015 and has not looked back since.
Orders
from Beijing, however, appeared to have slowed in 2018 for the first
time this decade following completion of the first phase of the standard
gauge railway (SGR) and some of the major road projects around the
country.
Kenya National Bureau of Statitics (KNBS) data
shows goods worth Sh346.61 billion were ordered from China in 11 months
through November 2018, being Sh19.6 billion lower than the Sh366.21
billion purchased in the same period in 2017.
CBK data
shows the value of imports from India have been dipping since 2015 prior
to last year, coinciding with a slowdown in the manufacturing sector.
Orders
from India, the data shows, slipped from Sh264.54 billion in 2014 to
Sh252.82 billion in 2015, Sh205.50 billion (2016) and Sh170.41 billion
in 2017 – the lowest value since Sh148.77 billion in 2011.
Manufacturing activities over the period slid to a low of 0.2
per cent in 2017 from 2.7 per cent in 2016 and 3.6 per cent (2015).
Activity in the manufacturing sector appeared to have picked up last
year, with the sector growing 3.2 percent in the third quarter of 2018
compared with a contraction of 0.1 percent in the corresponding period
in 2017.
Importation of industrial supplies such as
manufactured materials rose to Sh304.61 billion from Sh261.06 billion in
2017, the data collated by CBK shows, while chemicals orders also
increased to Sh254.53 billion from Sh237.96 billion.
“Key
items imported from India which include chemicals…have recorded an
increase due to the growth in demand for this products by local
manufacturers,” Kenya Association of Manufacturers (KAM) chief executive
Phyllis Wakiaga said via email.
“We expect an increase
in imports of chemicals and machinery (going forward) due to the
anticipated increase in production throughput in the chemical sector in
line with the ‘Big Four Agenda’.”
Full-year imports are
estimated to have fallen to about Sh378.12 billion – assuming a monthly
average of Sh31.51 billion in the January-November 2018 period – from
Sh390.63 billion in 2017.
Importation of Chinese goods
sprinted from Sh182.36 billion in 2013 to a peak of Sh390.63 billion in
2013, reflecting increased shipment of machinery and transportation
equipment into mega infrastructural projects that Beijing contractors
bagged in the period.
These included deals to build
first (Sh327 billion Mombasa-Nairobi) and second phase (Sh153 billion
Nairobi-Naivasha) of the standard gauge railway (SGR) as well as mega
road and bridge projects.
The value of Chinese imports
shot up from Sh248.65 billion in 2014 to Sh320.82 billion in 2015,
Sh337.45 billion (2016) and Sh390.63 billion (2017), KNBS data shows.
“With
the implementation of the SGR by the Government and modal shift (from
road to rail), we anticipate a relative decline in the importation of
road transport equipment, especially trucks,” Ms Wakiaga said.
Orders
from the two Far East countries are estimated at more than Sh550
billion, or nearly 32 percent of the Sh1.76 trillion of the total
imports in 2018, while exports were less than Sh20 billion, or about
3.26 percent of Sh612.88 billion earnings from exports.
A
persistently higher trade deficit, economists say, slows down creation
of new job opportunities for the growing graduate youth as most revenue
earned within Kenya is spent on buying goods from foreign factories,
thereby raising production and job openings there.
Farm produce
Kenya
has made penetration of value-added farm produce such as tea, coffee
and fruits to China and India a priority under the ambitious Integrated
National Exports Development and Promotion Strategy she unveiled last
July.
The ambitious exports growth strategy targets an
average annual growth in exports of 25 percent between 2018 and 2022,
culminating in a trade surplus.
Jaswinder Bedi,
chairman of state-run Export Promotion Council (EPC), said the country
is banking on penetration of Chinese and Indian markets to run a trade
surplus in less than four years.
Nairobi and Beijing
last November signed a memorandum of understanding on the sidelines of
the week-long China International Import Expo to establish a joint
working group to reduce trade barriers between the two countries.
“Now
that we have signed ... (an MoU) with China where we did not have
market access (for agricultural produce), we are looking at doing the
same with India and others like Malaysia and Thailand,” Mr Bedi said on
phone. “We are looking east because the market there is huge. The
opportunity is huge.”
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