Summary
- The faster growth helped the sector to narrowly dislodge manufacturing from the top of the list of largest revenue contributors after the latter’s tax receipts expanded by Sh10.05 billion, or 6.52 percent, to Sh164.30 billion.
- The slowdown in growth of tax revenue from factories reflects the shrinking contribution of manufacturing to Kenya’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
- Manufacturers have in the past largely blamed inefficiencies, higher levies, taxes and energy prices for ramping up cost of production, cutting the competitiveness of Kenyan factories by about 12 percent compared with global average.
The financial and
insurance sector has for the first time overtaken manufacturing to
become the largest source of tax revenue for the Exchequer, shinning the
spotlight on the dwindling competitiveness of Kenyan factories.
Statistics
from Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) show tax receipts from the financial
services sector, dominated by risk-averse banks, grew Sh17.29 billion
or 11.64 percent to nearly Sh165.84 billion in the fiscal year ended
June 2019 compared with a year earlier.
The faster
growth helped the sector to narrowly dislodge manufacturing from the top
of the list of largest revenue contributors after the latter’s tax
receipts expanded by Sh10.05 billion, or 6.52 percent, to Sh164.30
billion.
The slowdown in growth of tax revenue from
factories reflects the shrinking contribution of manufacturing to
Kenya’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
Manufacturers
have in the past largely blamed inefficiencies, higher levies, taxes and
energy prices for ramping up cost of production, cutting the
competitiveness of Kenyan factories by about 12 percent compared with
global average.
The manufacturing sector’s share of Kenya’s GDP has steadily
dropped to 7.51 percent (Sh712.34 billion) in the year through June 2019
from 7.92 percent (Sh674.86 billion) a year earlier and 8.61 percent
(Sh659.19 billion) in the 29016-17 fiscal year.
“The
manufacturing sector which is tax-rich…has seen its share of GDP
decline, undermining the overall tax effort in the country,” the taxman
says in sectoral contribution to taxation report. The dwindling weight
of the sector to the economic output continues even after President
Uhuru Kenyatta made manufacturing a key pillar of s “the Big Four
Agenda” economic transformation plan by 2022.
The President is banking on modernisation and development of new
factories largely in agro-processing, leather, textiles and
fish-processing subsectors to help generate targeted 800,000 new decent
jobs for Kenya’s rapidly expanding unemployed graduate youth.
Findings
of a research by Strathmore University and global business management
software firm Syspro showed in July that half of Kenyan factories
operate at suboptimal capacity. The survey which sampled nearly 100
manufacturing firms across 12 sub-sectors in Nairobi, Kiambu and
Machakos further suggested that 54 percent of factories operate less
than eight hours a day.
About 54 percent of the plants
cited cost of energy as a damper to optimal business operations, while
43 percent cited high taxes and cheap imports (40 percent).
An
analysis of latest full-year financial performance statements of eight
publicly-listed firms under manufacturing sector also shows that only
two have posted modest growth in sales revenue since 2016, with the
remainder suffering a dip in turnover.
The two are East
African Breweries whose full-year revenue for the period through June
2019 stood at Sh82.54 billion compared with Sh64.32 billion through June
2016, and Unga Group’s Sh19.98 billion for the period through June 2018
from Sh18.95 billion in June 2016.
Other manufacturing
firms whose shares are publicly traded on the Nairobi bourse, such as
BAT Kenya, BOC Kenya, Carbacid Investments, Flame Tree and Kenya
Orchards have reported less sales revenue in latest financial
performance filings compared with two years ago.
Troubled Mumias Sugar Company, on the other hand, has seen
revenue plunge to Sh1.38 billion for the year ended June, 2018 from
Sh6.29 billion two years earlier.
The sector’s
contribution to the national wealth is now at half the 15 percent target
under the “Big Four” Agenda strategy, an underperformance that has fed
into tax receipts.
“Our
economic structure has a growing agricultural sector and a declining
manufacturing sector,” KRA’s deputy commissioner for strategy and
innovation Joseline Ogai said in August.
“(As a result), we are now seeing the sectors where we
traditionally get tax revenue from showing signs of weakness and the
sectors where we don’t get a lot of tax revenue beginning to dominate
the economy.”
Disjointed informal industries coupled
with low investment and high cost of business has stifled job creation
in the Kenyan manufacturing sector, a review showed.
A
policy review by the State-run think-tank, Kenya Institute for Public
Policy Research and Analysis (Kippra), says the manufacturing sector has
continuously missed its jobs target over the years despite its
potential as key contributor to the national economy.
The
sector created some 700,000 jobs in the four years through 2016 against
a projected 1.1 million, an equivalent of a 36.6 percent
underperformance. Projections for formal manufacturing were 338,000 but
only 30,000 jobs were created. Informal manufacturing—popularly known as
jua kali— was projected to create 770,000 jobs of which 670,000 were
realised.
This represents job creation of 8 and 87 per cent respectively for formal and informal manufacturing.
“The manufacturing sector is key in the creation of job
opportunities. The sector is, however, plagued by growing informality
that contributes close to 90 percent of all the jobs,” the paper reads
in part. The contribution of farming activities – which are not largely
taxed because the produce either goes into home consumption, exported or
form raw materials for industries – to Kenya’s GDP has been rising in
recent years, hurting tax revenue receipts.
The
contribution of agriculture to GDP has risen from 33.84 percent (Sh2.59
trillion) in year ended June 2017 to 34.48 percent (Sh2.93 trillion) in
2017-18 and 35.37 percent in the one ended June 2019, estimates by the
Treasury shows.
The
sector’s share of government revenue, however, remained at a lowly 2.58
percent (Sh23.30 billion) of the Sh901.55 billion total domestic tax
receipts from the private sector, the KRA data shows.
This
is barely unchanged from 2.38 percent (Sh19.94 billion) of the total
Sh836.58 billion in 2017-18 and 2.28 percent of the Sh790.05 billion
private sector receipts the year before.
The low
contribution of agriculture to revenue has partly helped pull down
Kenya’s revenue to GDP ratio steadily from a high of 18.09 percent in
financial year ended June 2014 to 17.47 percent (2014-15), 16.88 percent
(2015-16), 16.33 percent (2016-17), 15.83 percent (2017-18) and 14.70
percent in 2018-19 fiscal year. “A combination of structural and
administrative issues has caused revenue/GDP to stagnate in recent
years. Some of this is the result of agriculture being a large component
of the economy and most of the non-export agricultural output coming
from untaxed smallholders,” Fitch analysts wrote in the report published
on April 30.
“In addition, weak tax compliance and the expansion of tax exemptions have muted domestic revenue growth.”
The
ICT sector, however, experienced the largest growth in tax receipts of
15.47 percent to Sh134.61 billion in the year through June 2019 compared
with Sh116.57 billion the year before. This makes the sector the third
largest source of tax revenue for the government, pushing the sector’s
tax to GDP ratio to 103.4 percent. This is because its share to Kenya’s
economic output was estimated at Sh122.36 billion (1.29 percent),
according to KRA data.
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