Kenyan Output Sinks Amid Presidential Elections

 | Sep 20, 2017 05:36

Survey results indicate that election uncertainty has hit the Kenyan economy. The Stanbic Bank Kenya PMI data for August indicated the worst deterioration in the health of the Kenyan private sector since the inception of the survey in January 2014. Companies reported that the general election choked the private sector economy, citing lower customer orders due to uncertainty amid the heated political climate.

As companies looked forward to ‘business as usual’ after the incumbent president, Uhuru Kenyatta, was announced the winner of the election on 8th August, confusion soon followed as the result was nullified by the Kenyan supreme court in an historic ruling on 1st September. According to Chief Justice David Maraga, the election had not been conducted in compliance with the constitution, declaring it “invalid, null and void.” A re-election has been tentatively scheduled for October 17th (within 60 days). This could mean a sustained period of uncertainty and subsequent disruption for Kenyan firms.

Business reports worst downturn in recent years

The recent general election pulled the private sector economy into a sharp downturn, with August experiencing a survey record slump. The PMI survey shows that output has now fallen in four successive months, with weak credit growth partly responsible .