Dominic Omondi
The rate at which Kenya minted millionaires between 2014 and 2019 was the fastest in the world, a
new wealth report has shown.
The number of individuals worth Sh100 million and above increased by 263 per cent between 2014 and 2019, beating even China.
The creation of dollar millionaires is despite a dire state of the
economy in which businesses have been sacking workers and closing shop.
Kenya’s rate was higher than China’s, the world’s second largest economy
and which during the period enjoyed faster economic growth than Kenya.
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National
Treasury estimates the economy to have expanded by 5.6 per cent last
year, a slow-down compared to 6.3 per cent in 2018.
But ironically, some Kenyans suddenly found themselves super-rich, with
the number of dollar millionaires growing from a low of 800 in 2014 to a
high of 3,360 in 2018 before it tapered off to 2,900.
The finding by property management firm Knight Frank shows that the 263
per cent growth in the number of dollar-millionaires during the period
was by far the fastest in the world, even as majority of Kenyans
struggled to put food on the table.
Various reasons can be attributed to the drop, key among them the
revaluation of investments and crackdown on corrupt individuals.
The baffling statistics are contained in the Wealth Report 2020, which
sought to get a tally of high net worth individuals from 44 countries,
including the US and China.
While the size of Kenya’s economy -- measured by adding up all goods and
services produced in a year-- expanded by an average 5.64 per cent
between 2014 and 2018, that of China grew by an average of 6.88 per cent
during this period.
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India,
which enjoyed a higher economic growth during this period, 7.2 per
cent, minted new dollar millionaires at a rate of 168 per cent. In a
country where majority of its population are poor, this is likely to
ignite debate on how people became overnight millionaires.
Critics reckon that President Uhuru Kenyatta’s first term in office
enabled ‘tenderpreneurs’ to thrive, with a few well-connected
individuals enriching themselves by unscrupulously bagging major
tenders.
Samuel Nyandemo, an Economics lecturer at the University of Nairobi,
believes the growth in the number of billionaires in Kenya is skewed,
and does not reflect the economic situation. “If they are rich as they
claim, how did they accumulate their wealth? Is it by engaging in
productive activities or is it by stealing?” Dr Nyandemo asked. “If this
wealth was created genuinely, it would have trickled down to the
economy”.
Kenya’s high rate of dollar millionaires compares badly with the
sluggish growth in the growth of employment figures. The number of
Kenyans who earn less than Sh100,000 in a month increased by only 14 per
cent during this period, according to official figures.
Recent report
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Amid
a difficult financial environment, which has seen companies shed jobs
and others shut down, the International Monetary Fund recently released a
report that showed the value of what Kenya produces in a year, its
gross domestic product (GDP), is poised to surpass the Sh10 trillion
mark this year.
The Wealth Report found that the number of multi-billionaires dropped by
a massive 499.
This coincided with the crackdown on corrupt state
officers and tenderpreneurs that saw several individuals dragged to
court.
The 2014-19 period was characterised by a number of massive theft of
public funds. Some of these scandals include embezzlement of public
funds at the National Youth Service (NYS) through fictitious supplies to
the state corporation.
Another scandal revealed how a secretary at the National Hospital
Insurance Fund (NHIF) allegedly owned eight town houses in the upmarket
Green Park estate off Mombasa Road in Athi River.
A villa townhouse in
the area cost upwards of Sh35 million. He also has a fleet of posh cars.
Then there was the baffling case of a 38-year-old millionaire messenger
from Migori who raked in Sh700 million for allegedly offering
consultancy services to State departments. A messenger sits at the
lowest rung in the salary scale in the civil service, taking home an
average monthly salary of Sh20,000.
Besides the increase in the number of high net worth individuals (HNWI),
Kenya also had one of the highest growth rates among the ultra-high net
worth individuals (UHNWI) at 163 per cent during this period. The
increase was only second to Vietnam where the number of ultra-high net
worth individuals shot up by 223 per cent.
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The
number of Kenyans worth Sh3 billion and above, mostly in real estate,
increased from 16 in 2014 to 42 in 2019. A year earlier, there were 48
super-rich individuals.
It might be that Kenya started at a low base compared to other
countries, thus the huge leap. Compared to other countries, Kenya has
the lowest number of dollar millionaires at 800. This was even lower
than Tanzania’s at 3,000. Only Uganda and Zambia, with 126 and 200,
dollar-millionaires respectively, had a lower tally in the number of
multi-millionaires.
The US had the most number of dollar-millionaires, 16.4 million,
followed by China with 7.3 million individuals who are worth Sh100
million and above.
US also leads in the number of the ultra-rich, those with $30 million
(Sh3 billion) and above, at 240,575 followed by China with 61,587. Third
is Germany with 23,078 followed by France with 18,776.
There are 2,335 dollar billionaires in the world, or individuals with
Sh100 billion and above. Close to a third of them, 631, are US citizens.
China has the second largest number of dollar billionaires.
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