Kenya Economic Update, October 2016

Kenya is one of the bright spots in Sub-Saharan Africa. With economic growth rates sustained at above 5 percent, Kenya has outperformed the regional average, for 8 consecutive years. Robust domestic demand emanating from private consumption and government investment are the key drivers of growth, underpinned by a stable macroeconomic environment, lower oil prices, diversification, improved security perceptions, and ongoing structural reforms. Medium term economic prospects for Kenya remain robust. Ongoing public infrastructure investments will continue to play a ‘crowding-in’ role, easing transport and energy costs, and supporting economic expansion in construction andindustry. Private consumption will drive service sector growth, while agricultural sector will remain largely dependent on favorable weather conditions and timely availability of inputs. Though oil prices are expected to pick-up over the forecast horizon, Kenya’s external sector account will remain healthy on account of a steady increase in remittances, a rebound in tourism and a rise in foreign direct Investment (FDI). Nonetheless, there exist downside risks that can dent future growth prospects. Risks to Kenya’s future growth prospects that are not included in our baseline outlook emanate from both external and domestic sources. On the external front, these include weaker than expected growth in the global economy, volatility in global financial markets and a spike in oil prices. On the domestic front, these include delays to fiscal consolidation, adverse weather developments, and potential uncertainties associated with the run-up to 2017 elections that could lead to a wait-and-see attitude by investors, thereby dampening short-term growth prospects.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank Group
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Nairobi, Kenya 2016-10
Subjects:economic growth, manufacturing, global demand, macroeconomic policy, exchange rate, trade, fiscal trends, monetary policy, economic outlook, infrastructure investment, export competitiveness, productivity, public investment,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/882161477667623804/Beyond-resilience-increasing-productivity-of-public-investments
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/25380
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spelling dig-okr-10986253802024-08-07T19:49:53Z Kenya Economic Update, October 2016 Beyond Resilience--Increasing Productivity of Public Investments World Bank Group economic growth manufacturing global demand macroeconomic policy exchange rate trade fiscal trends monetary policy economic outlook infrastructure investment export competitiveness productivity public investment Kenya is one of the bright spots in Sub-Saharan Africa. With economic growth rates sustained at above 5 percent, Kenya has outperformed the regional average, for 8 consecutive years. Robust domestic demand emanating from private consumption and government investment are the key drivers of growth, underpinned by a stable macroeconomic environment, lower oil prices, diversification, improved security perceptions, and ongoing structural reforms. Medium term economic prospects for Kenya remain robust. Ongoing public infrastructure investments will continue to play a ‘crowding-in’ role, easing transport and energy costs, and supporting economic expansion in construction andindustry. Private consumption will drive service sector growth, while agricultural sector will remain largely dependent on favorable weather conditions and timely availability of inputs. Though oil prices are expected to pick-up over the forecast horizon, Kenya’s external sector account will remain healthy on account of a steady increase in remittances, a rebound in tourism and a rise in foreign direct Investment (FDI). Nonetheless, there exist downside risks that can dent future growth prospects. Risks to Kenya’s future growth prospects that are not included in our baseline outlook emanate from both external and domestic sources. On the external front, these include weaker than expected growth in the global economy, volatility in global financial markets and a spike in oil prices. On the domestic front, these include delays to fiscal consolidation, adverse weather developments, and potential uncertainties associated with the run-up to 2017 elections that could lead to a wait-and-see attitude by investors, thereby dampening short-term growth prospects. 2016-11-18T18:05:31Z 2016-11-18T18:05:31Z 2016-10 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/882161477667623804/Beyond-resilience-increasing-productivity-of-public-investments https://hdl.handle.net/10986/25380 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Nairobi, Kenya
institution Banco Mundial
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countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic economic growth
manufacturing
global demand
macroeconomic policy
exchange rate
trade
fiscal trends
monetary policy
economic outlook
infrastructure investment
export competitiveness
productivity
public investment
economic growth
manufacturing
global demand
macroeconomic policy
exchange rate
trade
fiscal trends
monetary policy
economic outlook
infrastructure investment
export competitiveness
productivity
public investment
spellingShingle economic growth
manufacturing
global demand
macroeconomic policy
exchange rate
trade
fiscal trends
monetary policy
economic outlook
infrastructure investment
export competitiveness
productivity
public investment
economic growth
manufacturing
global demand
macroeconomic policy
exchange rate
trade
fiscal trends
monetary policy
economic outlook
infrastructure investment
export competitiveness
productivity
public investment
World Bank Group
Kenya Economic Update, October 2016
description Kenya is one of the bright spots in Sub-Saharan Africa. With economic growth rates sustained at above 5 percent, Kenya has outperformed the regional average, for 8 consecutive years. Robust domestic demand emanating from private consumption and government investment are the key drivers of growth, underpinned by a stable macroeconomic environment, lower oil prices, diversification, improved security perceptions, and ongoing structural reforms. Medium term economic prospects for Kenya remain robust. Ongoing public infrastructure investments will continue to play a ‘crowding-in’ role, easing transport and energy costs, and supporting economic expansion in construction andindustry. Private consumption will drive service sector growth, while agricultural sector will remain largely dependent on favorable weather conditions and timely availability of inputs. Though oil prices are expected to pick-up over the forecast horizon, Kenya’s external sector account will remain healthy on account of a steady increase in remittances, a rebound in tourism and a rise in foreign direct Investment (FDI). Nonetheless, there exist downside risks that can dent future growth prospects. Risks to Kenya’s future growth prospects that are not included in our baseline outlook emanate from both external and domestic sources. On the external front, these include weaker than expected growth in the global economy, volatility in global financial markets and a spike in oil prices. On the domestic front, these include delays to fiscal consolidation, adverse weather developments, and potential uncertainties associated with the run-up to 2017 elections that could lead to a wait-and-see attitude by investors, thereby dampening short-term growth prospects.
format Report
topic_facet economic growth
manufacturing
global demand
macroeconomic policy
exchange rate
trade
fiscal trends
monetary policy
economic outlook
infrastructure investment
export competitiveness
productivity
public investment
author World Bank Group
author_facet World Bank Group
author_sort World Bank Group
title Kenya Economic Update, October 2016
title_short Kenya Economic Update, October 2016
title_full Kenya Economic Update, October 2016
title_fullStr Kenya Economic Update, October 2016
title_full_unstemmed Kenya Economic Update, October 2016
title_sort kenya economic update, october 2016
publisher World Bank, Nairobi, Kenya
publishDate 2016-10
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/882161477667623804/Beyond-resilience-increasing-productivity-of-public-investments
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/25380
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