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Kenya’s Imports from China at its Three Year Low As SGR Work Ends

Georgina Korir

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Kenya’s import bill is at its three-year low as a result of Completion of the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) line from Mombasa to Naivasha.

The fall points to reduced shipment of capital goods such as transportation equipment and machinery from China on completion of the multi-billion-dollar modern railway project that set back taxpayers more than Sh500 billion.

Data from the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) indicates that orders from China dipped Sh41.42 billion in the January-September 2019 period, adding to the Sh9.40 billion drop in the same period last year.

The KNBS data shows that Beijing shipped in goods worth Sh250.78 billion in the nine months to September, a 14.17 percent drop from the Sh292.2 billion it imported in the same period last year and Sh301.60 billion in 2017.

Kwame Owino, chief executive of think tank Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA)  said, “Last year and the year before we were importing locomotives and other capital goods required to complete the SGR before operations and that’s part of what raised those imports. But there are no more locomotives this year. These were high-value capital goods coming in at once,”

The SGR project and other deals to build mega roads projects propelled China to become the country’s largest source of imports ahead of traditional markets such as India and Japan.

The 14 percent dip in orders from China helped trim Kenya’s total import bill by 3.69 percent to Sh1.28 trillion in the nine-month period from Sh1.33 trillion in a corresponding period in 2018 and Sh1.297 trillion a year earlier.

Nonetheless, Kenya did not capitalize on reduced demand for goods from abroad to grow her exports, with earnings dropping Sh22.94 billion, or 4.87 percent, to Sh444.70 billion in the review period. A slowdown in export earnings suggests a difficult operating environment for domestic enterprises, hurting income and job opportunities.

The contraction in total imports was, nonetheless, enough to narrow the country’s trade deficit – the gap between imports and exports – by Sh26.13 billion to Sh834.03 billion in the nine-month period, the KNBS data shows.

The trade statistics, sourced from the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA), show that Expenditure on non-food industrial supplies slumped Sh27.14 billion, or 5.82 percent, to Sh439.19 billion while consumer goods not stated elsewhere slipped Sh8.33 billion, or 7.64 percent, to Sh100.62 billion while shipment of transport equipment dropped Sh20.14 billion, or 13.56 percent, to Sh128.38 billion, while machinery imports dropped to Sh209.85 billion from Sh211.10 billion.

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