President Uhuru Kenyatta’s housing agenda.
This is the State shifts resources to fight the pandemic that has so far killed 10 people in Kenya, and efforts to contain its spread lead to restricted movement and a slow down in economic activity. While the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) was projected to grow by 6 per cent from last year’s 5.9 per cent, the virus has hurt key sectors, with the Central Bank and the Treasury revising growth estimates downwards to as low as 3 per cent. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) puts its projections at 1 per cent. Key elements
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In a recent update, investment firm Cytonn said the effects of the pandemic on the economy would back-pedal progress made in the country’s housing sector. “The government had taken a bold initiative to deliver on affordable housing. The initial plan had useful and constructive elements, but the net effect of the Covid-19 pandemic will batter some key elements in the plan,” the firm said. Cytonn, however, believes that strengthening the integrated framework, revising eligibility criteria, reviewing flexibility to fit varied incomes and upscaling of private capital participation will see the housing sector rebound. On its part, UN-Habitat says the housing agenda will face hurdles, “but not to a level of collapse”. “The time-frame and mode of achieving the agenda are solid, but not immune to coronavirus and its economic aftermaths. But it is broader and has time to recover,” said UN-Habitat Programmes Officer John Ougo, noting that the country’s New Urban Agenda runs to 2036, not 2022 as widely cited.
But according to former Parliamentary Budget Committee chair Elias Mbau, who is an economist, the virus has dampened hope for the housing agenda. “The situation looks bleak because we need taxes to finance the construction of those housing units. We need donor funding, as well as a public-private partnership to speed up the housing agenda. We only have two years left to take stock of this agenda. We most certainly will not meet it,” said Mr Mbau, who is the chair for the New Partnerships for African Development (Nepad). He added that the collapse of economic sectors in the face of the viral scourge presents a major leak for future budgetary estimates. “With production now strained, it means the consumption aspect of the economy will suffer. That is how we will lose the agenda on housing,” he said. Wanjumbi Mwangi, a public policy analyst, said the resources required to deliver on the agenda were never clearly computed in the Budget Policy Statement for 2018-19. SEE ALSO: Renewables top 90pc of Kenya’s power
Parliamentary Budget Committee Chairman Kimani Ichung’wa concurs that it will be hectic to marshal the necessary resources in the wake of the Covid-19 crisis. “We are not even at 10 per cent on realising this housing agenda where we were targeting to build 800,000 affordable housing and 200,000 social housing units by 2022,” he said. “We only have two budgets (2020-21 and 2021-22) remaining for President Kenyatta’s term to end in 2022. How we will achieve 90 per cent of this housing agenda within two budgets is simply unrealistic.” He said the 2020-21 budgetary estimates will now be revised to factor in the aftermaths of the Covid-19 scourge that is eating into the heart of the country’s economic lifelines. Last August, Transport and Infrastructure Cabinet Secretary James Macharia said Sh3 trillion was needed to midwife the housing agenda by 2022 — a figure that is bigger than the total estimates of the entire 2017-18 fiscal year SEE ALSO: It pays to put cash in empowering people
Mbau added that even before Covid-19, the housing agenda was in the “wrong hatchery” after stakeholders failed on the basics of funding it. “Coronavirus is just the last straw that broke our beautiful housing agenda. We will now focus more on securing our people healthwise, not housing them. We cannot build houses for a dying population. It is an issue of priority,” he said. Higher ground He explained that housing could have been struck by Covid-19 while on higher ground if stakeholders had agreed fast enough on financing it. Mathira MP Rigathi Gachagua said the Treasury is not sure if it will manage to balance the 2020-21 fiscal estimates. The Treasury allocated Sh10.5 billion to housing in the 2019-20 budget, and Sh8 billion in the previous 2018-19 budget.
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