As President Is Finally Inaugurated, Kenyans Are Feeling Economic struggle




Florence Makau once made $10 a day selling used clothes from inside a former shipping container, enough to feed her three children, pay their school fees and cover the rent. That was during better times in Kibera, a crowded working-class Nairobi neighborhood.

Times are no longer that good in Kibera or elsewhere in Kenya. Government institutions blame drought and rising oil prices, but another reason has afflicted Kenyans across the socioeconomic spectrum: Politics.

Kenya endured an unexpectedly long and volatile election period, capped on Tuesday when Uhuru Kenyatta was sworn in for a second term as president. Many hope his inauguration will end the country’s political uncertainty, but much economic damage has already been done.

“It’s a lost year. Completely,” said Emma Gordon, a senior analyst for sub-Saharan Africa at Verisk Maplecroft, a global risk assessment firm. Investors know election season means an economic slowdown, and that the slump usually starts well before voting day. But this year Kenya conducted two presidential elections, nearly three months apart, because of an unprecedented Supreme Court ruling.

Mr. Kenyatta initially won re-election in August, handily defeating longtime rival Raila Odinga. Mr. Odinga challenged the outcome at the Court, which in September nullified Mr. Kenyatta’s victory. That ruling was celebrated by political analysts as a great sign for Kenya’s democracy, but it undermined the economy. The Nairobi Stock Exchange nose-dived on the Friday of the decision, and by the close of business the following Monday nearly $1.3 billion had been erased from the value of listed companies.


Two months of political uncertainty and occasional violence followed. Mr. Odinga withdrew from the second campaign, saying the process remained flawed. The election commission chairman warned that the poll was unlikely to be free and fair. The election proceeded anyway, and Mr. Kenyatta won again, collecting 98 percent of a vote the opposition party boycotted.

Throughout, Kenya’s economy has taken a significant hit.

Kenya welcomed 15 percent fewer visitors in August the month of the first presidential vote, also the peak of the tourist season and a crucial driver of the country’s economy than in July. Figures compiled monthly by Kenya’s National Bureau of Statistics show the country’s other major industries suffering as well. Key manufacturing indicators fell an average of nearly 20 percent compared with the same period last year. The agriculture sector also suffered, although the statistics bureau attributed that to drought.

Kenya’s Finance Ministry now expects economic growth of 5 percent this year, almost a full percentage point lower than its initial forecast.

Official figures, however, hardly tell the whole story.

“Those numbers mask how much this affected your average Joe in Kenya,” said Ms. Gordon, the analyst. “It’s not been a good period for the average working Kenyan.”

That is partly because women like Ms. Makau, the clothing seller in Kibera, are ignored in the government’s figures, which do not measure the “informal economy” composed of people who work as street vendors, drivers and casual laborers.

Ms. Makau, 60, is feeling the stress. Her onetime daily income of $10 is now $5, if she’s lucky. She is paying her rent piecemeal so that she does not have to skimp even more on meals for her children. Finding trendy fashions to hawk is a thing of the past.

Mr. Odinga’s speech was cut short by police firing tear gas and, witnesses say, bullets. Members of Mr. Odinga’s party say five people were shot, and two killed, during the afternoon’s chaos.

The skirmish, and Mr. Odinga’s promise of continued provocation, undid feelings of relief in a city where many people, whatever their politics, say they simply want normality.

Ms. Makau, the clothes seller, said she has no idea when she’ll have enough money to restock. Mr. Oudu, 27, is still single, in a country where men are often married by that age, but says he lacks enough cash to date girls. Anna Mwenda, who sells phone credit in downtown Nairobi, cannot afford Christmas gifts for her five-year-old son, or the traditional holiday visit to see her family in rural Kenya.

Jeremy Maganga, a 45-year-old scrap dealer in Kibera, said it is unclear when family life will feel normal again. He and his wife have found new weekend routines to avoid guests  and the social expectation of sharing food. Mr. Maganga sits at work Saturdays, though there’s little business, and on Sundays after church, he and his wife and children loiter away from home.

“Normally we need visitors,” he said, expressing an appreciation for the drop-ins that are common here. “But now, we reduce food at home by cutting them out. We cannot welcome anyone.”

To say such a thing in Kenya is to admit both shame and defeat. Those feelings follow Mr. Maganga everywhere these days; he’s even taken to dodging his wife and children, spending extra-long hours at work and hoping they are asleep when he comes home.

He spends a few Kenyan shillings  no more than a dime or two on mandaazi, a popular fried dough snack, for the children, just in case they are awake. It is his attempt, these days, at not disappointing them.

“They are angry at me,” he said of his family, “that I cannot provide.”

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