Kenya’s economy is projected to grow by 4.3 per cent this year and 4.4 per cent in 2027, the World Bank said on Thursday, with the forecast seeing a 0.6 percentage points lower than its November prediction due to the impact of the US-Israeli war on Iran.
In its latest economic update released on Thursday, the bank blame the Israel-Iran war, higher oil prices, Strait of Hormuz shipping disruptions and costlier fertilizer are raising production costs and squeezing households.
The bank said the other downside risks to Kenya’s economic performance included climate-related shocks and political uncertainty related to the electoral cycle.
According to the bank, the Middle East conflict, leading to higher fuel prices and those of other goods dependent on fuel, could push the poverty rate up by 2 to 4.5 percentage points, which could put another one million to 2.4 million Kenyans below the $3 per person per day poverty line.
“In the short term, higher global energy prices and increased uncertainty are expected to raise production costs, weaken private investment growth and weigh on household purchasing power through higher commodity prices and moderating remittance inflows,” the bank said in its latest economic update.
The bank said that adequate agricultural harvests, easing monetary policy, a stable exchange rate and recovering credit to the private sector would help cushion the economy.
East Africa’s biggest economy has been expanding steadily by around 5 per cent a year, but there are near-term risks including the fallout from the war in Iran, which has led to a surge in petroleum prices and disrupted shipping around the Strait of Hormuz.
“Approaching elections may delay private investment decisions, increase policy uncertainty and slow implementation of structural reforms,” the World Bank said.
“At the same time, pre-election spending pressures could weaken fiscal discipline and delay planned consolidation efforts, while heightened political tensions could adversely affect business and consumer confidence.”
In late June, the World Bank approved a $750 million budget-support loan for Kenya and a $500 million sustainability-linked facility that will cut the country’s reliance on expensive domestic debt and bolster economic reforms.
MG/GIK/APA


