World Bank advices Ruto on how to grow the Kenyan economy

World Bank gives President William Ruto three-pointers to turn around the Kenyan economy
World Bank gives President William Ruto three-pointers to turn around the Kenyan economy.
Through its Kenya Country Economic Memorandum (CEM), Seizing Kenya’s Service Momentum, World Bank revealed that while Kenya had recovered admirably post-pandemic, there was still more that needed to be done to achieve economic prosperity.
The World Bank advised the government to focus on managing the public debt, being open to trade and strong foreign direct investment, and accelerating the pace of employment creation.
CEM claims that there has been a rapid increase in governmental debt, which has reduced budgetary room and increased worries about debt sustainability.
According to the report, Kenya witnessed exponential growth starting in 2020, but it was financed by a government borrowing binge.
“The increase in expenditure was driven partly by large increases in debt-financed public investment, peaking at over 7 per cent of GDP in 2017 when the Mombasa-Nairobi Single Gauge Railway project was completed,” World Bank pointed out.
World Bank was further indicated that while devolved units had their benefits, they burdened the country through increased recurrent expenditures.
Ruto’s government was advised that to maintain debt sustainability, the size of Kenya’s fiscal deficits and the pace of debt accumulation needed to be moderated.
“Although many governments have larger debts relative to GDP, the cost of Kenya’s government debt relative to its revenues is high by global standards,” the report warned.
World Bank noted that Kenya’s exports remained skewed as it heavily relied on agricultural exports with fewer service exports (tourism and travel, transportation, and financial services).
“Consequently, Kenya’s economy is much less trade-oriented than is the norm for peer and aspirational peer economies, depriving it of a major potential engine of growth and job creation,” the report revealed consequences of the unbalanced trading.
Kenya was advised to tap into export markets to generate opportunities for firms and help to overcome the constraint of the still-small domestic market.
World Bank further noted that FDIs remained low averaging 1 percent of GDP and called for stimulating the sector.
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“This will not only augment the limited pool of financing available locally to meet investment needs, but also promote structural transformation through positive knowledge spillovers into the domestic economy from firms with international knowledge, and integration in global value chains,” the institution remarked on the importance of stimulating FDIs.
World Bank noted that while poverty levels in the country were gradually reducing, this did not translate into enough new high-quality jobs.
“More than 800,000 people join the labour market every year, but formal sector jobs have increased by under 100,000 annually in recent years. The vast majority of the new entrants find low-productivity, informal work in agriculture and the non-agricultural informal sector,” the report indicated.
World Bank advised Ruto’s government that realising a demographic dividend would depend on the availability of sufficiently remunerative jobs and earning opportunities, without which too many families’ incomes will remain at subsistence levels.
“The economy will need to generate more high-quality jobs than has been the case in the recent period characterized by relatively high public spending, and a narrow and declining role of trade and foreign investment,” Ruto was advised.
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