President Uhuru Kenyatta with his US counterpart Donald Trump at the
White House in Washington DC in August last year. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Kenya is steadily enhancing its attractiveness to international
investors, but “endemic” corruption slows the flow of foreign capital
into the country's economy, the US State Department said on
Thursday.
Thursday.
This
generally positive but guarded appraisal is presented in the Kenya
section of a set of “Investment Climate Statements” that assess
receptivity to foreign investment in more than 170 countries.
Prepared
by economic officers in US embassies around the world, the
comprehensive statements are intended to help guide investment decisions
by US companies.
“Kenya has a positive investment
climate that has made it attractive to international firms seeking a
location for regional or pan-African operations,” the State Department
declares at the outset of its review of Kenya's economic, political and
security status.
The statement notes substantial
improvement in Kenya's ranking in the World Bank's global report on the
comparative ease of doing business.
Passage of tax and finance laws and other “broad business reforms” on the part of Kenya are cited as well.
“Kenya’s macroeconomic fundamentals remain among the strongest
in Africa, with five to six per cent GDP growth over the past five
years, six to eight per cent inflation, improving infrastructure, and
strong consumer demand from a growing middle class,” the statement adds.
“Kenya’s
capital markets are the deepest and most sophisticated in East Africa,”
the US says. “The Kenyan capital market has grown rapidly in recent
years and has also exhibited strong capital raising capacity.”
Investors are warned, however, that corruption remains deeply rooted in Kenya's society and economy.
“There
are many reports that corruption often influences the outcomes of
government tenders, and US firms have had limited success bidding on
public procurements,” the statement points out.
The
assessment makes note of President Uhuru Kenyatta's announced campaign
against corruption, and finds that “Kenya’s anti-corruption agencies now
appear to be coordinating more effectively.”
“But no high-level officials were successfully prosecuted and convicted for corruption in 2018,” the statement points out.
“But no high-level officials were successfully prosecuted and convicted for corruption in 2018,” the statement points out.
Property rights in Kenya are framed as a source of concern for potential US investors.
“The
cumbersome and opaque process required to acquire land raises concerns
about security of title, particularly given past abuses relating to the
distribution and redistribution of public land,” the State Department
observes.
Potential investors are further cautioned
that “if property legally purchased remains unoccupied, the property
ownership can revert to other occupiers, including squatters.”
Enforcement
of intellectual property rights in Kenya is marred by corruption, the
statement adds, pointing to failures to collect penalties from law
violators and to impound imports of counterfeit goods.
Kenya's vulnerability to terrorist attacks is also cited.
Kenya's vulnerability to terrorist attacks is also cited.
“Security
expenditures represent a substantial operating expense for businesses
in Kenya,” says the investment climate statement.
US
businesses considering starting operations in Kenya are told they will
find a large pool of available workers, including highly-qualified
professionals.
While Kenya reports an official
unemployment rate of 7.4 per cent, the actual figure is close to 30 per
cent, the appraisal indicates.
President Kenyatta's
meeting with President Trump in Washington a year ago is said to have
made US companies more eager to establish or expand their business
presence in Kenya.
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