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Political spat sparks jitters over Kenya’s growth outlook

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An investor monitors the day’s trading at the Nairobi Stock Exchange. Investors suffered erosion of wealth as foreigners scaled down their participation at the bourse, cutting down volumes. Photo/FILE

An investor monitors the day’s trading at the Nairobi Stock Exchange. Investors suffered erosion of wealth as foreigners scaled down their participation at the bourse, cutting down volumes. Photo/FILE 

By WASHINGTON GIKUNJU  (email the author)
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Posted  Thursday, February 18  2010 at  00:00

Rising hostility between Kenya’s coalition partners is relegating economic agenda from the national platform and eroding the prospects of recovery at a time when conditions are ripe for growth, business leaders warned on Wednesday even as politicians hardened their positions.

Foreign investors, manufacturers, bankers and private equity specialists who talked to Business Daily said the quick turn of events since Friday last week has elevated Kenya’s political risk profile to a new high raising the prospect of pulling back the pace of economic activity.

Michael Turner, a partner and regional chief executive of private equity group Actis, said political wrangles were causing jitters among prospective international investors who could strike Kenya off their investment priority lists.

It could slow down growth in the short term by forcing investors to put their investment plans on hold, rendering the economy incapable of creating jobs for millions of unemployed youth.
“Investors like certainty, without that they will sit on the fence,” said Mr Turner.

The latest Citigroup Global Markets report describes Kenya as a country that “offers vast growth potential but is beset by political uncertainty in the near-term, a lack of infrastructure and vulnerability to volatile food inflation.”

Kenya’s fragile Grand Coalition government has had many hiccups since it was formed two years ago but the latest crisis – triggered by the prime minister’s attempt to suspend two cabinet ministers over alleged corruption – has raised hostilities to a level that most analysts described as worrying.

National grid

“We are watching the situation closely. It is unfortunate that it is happening when we are so close to breaking the ground for our project,” said Carlo Van Wageningen, the chairman of Lake Turkana Wind Power Project.

If completed by June 2012 as planned, the Lake Turkana Wind Project will bring in up to Sh55 billion in foreign direct investments and add 300 mega watts of desperately needed renewable and affordable energy to the national power grid.

Political analysts said Prime Minister Raila Odinga’s Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) party threat to boycott Cabinet meetings and possible political supremacy wars in parliament (which re-opens next Tuesday) could effectively paralyse government and delay the passing of the Supplementary Budget that traditionally goes to the house in March.

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Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) statistics show that harsh economic conditions in the last two years have forced government to step up its spending on infrastructure projects to stimulate economic activity, and any slowdown in State expenditure could drag down overall growth.

CBK says in its latest monthly economic review that an estimated Sh21.9 billion remained locked up in government coffers as at the end of December owing to “administrative constraints to government spending.”

There are concerns that delayed release of the funds, some of which requires parliamentary approval, will further slow down economic activity.

Importers of essential goods such as oil and other consumer items are already feeling the pressure of having to pay more after the shilling slid to an eight-month low weighed down by political sentiments.

Investors at the Nairobi Stock Exchange are also suffering erosion of their wealth as foreigners scale down their participation in the bourse, cutting down volumes.

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