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Thursday, September 10, 2020
IMF sees upward revision of Kenya’s economic growth
By Bloomberg
The International Monetary Fund will revise Kenya's gross domestic
product upwards this year from an earlier forecast for a contraction
even after key Kenyan industries were hit by the Covid-19 pandemic.
The change in outlook is supported by an improvement in several economic
indicators and the lender now expects an "upward revision" of its June
forecast for the economy to shrink by 0.3 per cent in 2020, Tobias
Rasmussen, the IMF’s resident representative for Kenya, said Wednesday
at a virtual conference organised by Renaissance Capital.
The IMF will release an updated Word Economic Outlook report next month, he said.
"We have seen an upturn in most activity indicators,” Rasmussen said.
"Looking at the numbers coming out of Kenya it’s fair to say that the
outruns here have so far been better than what we at the IMF expected."
Kenya’s flower industry, the largest exporter of blooms to Europe, saw
export earnings increase in the period through July, as did those of tea
and fruit compared to last year, according to data from the statistics
agency.
Parliament’s budget office has also revised its growth outlook to
between 1 per cent and 2 per cent from an earlier forecast of -1.5 per
cent to 1 per cent in April 2020, citing better than expected
agricultural exports.
Renaissance Capital forecasts Kenya’s economy to grow at 1.5 per cent in
2020 driven by superior agricultural yields because of good rains,
according to Yvonne Mhango, sub-Saharan Africa economist at the
investment bank.
Kenya’s economy remains resilient due to its diversification and low
dependency on natural resources for export, Central Bank of Kenya Deputy
Governor Sheila M’Mbijjewe said. "There are good signs of recovery,
these are visible. These are all positive, but the uncertainty remains,"
she said.
The country is in talks with the World Bank for a loan to provide
further budget support after receiving $1 billion (Sh108 billion) in
May, which followed a $750 million (Sh81 billion) package approved in
2019. The budget gap is seen at Sh840.6 billion in the current fiscal
year.
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