Monday, December 18, 2006

More NARCotics

Prof Kivutha Kibwana is once again giving verbal evidence of his hypocrisy. Not content with making bad law and re-writing history, the Environment and Natural Resources Minister who is also acting Minister for Lands is, according to a Daily Nation report, promising one those posts to the Meru "for their trust and support for President Kibaki". He is also reported as asking the Provincial Administration to refrain from political neutrality and favour NARC-Kenya interim officials because "it is the party in power". This from the guy who once incited mass action under the pretext of fighting for democratic change. It is most disheartening (though not surprising in this era of Orwellian "Animal Farm" politics) to hear him championing tribalism and favouritism.

Oh...and someone should disabuse him of the notion that NARC-K is the governing party. I think he long ago took leave of reality.

4 comments:

  1. Anonymous10:16 AM

    I think there's something in the water at parliament that makes you an ass once you drink it

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous11:43 PM

    v
    This Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation aims at giving Kenyans
    a better deal in our lives and in our struggle to build a modern and prosperous nation. It aims to
    empower Kenyans and to provide them with a democratic political atmosphere under which all
    citizens can be free to work hard and engage in productive activities to improve their standards of
    living. In this regard, this strategy is focused on implementing the promises in the Manifesto of
    the National Rainbow Coalition (NARC), our ruling party, which are based on two concepts:
    democracy and empowerment.
    During the past two decades, we have seen Kenya slide systematically into the abyss of
    underdevelopment and hopelessness. Poverty has increased, unemployment has become rampant,
    insecurity has visited almost every homestead, hunger is prevalent among the poor, the health
    condition of the people has declined significantly, while corruption and bad governance became
    entrenched as political oppression weighed heavily on the people. The oppression went for long
    by dividing the people along ethnic lines, nurturing hatred and suspicion among the people and
    creating a huge divide between the governors and the governed. Many Kenyans almost lost hope
    in their own nation.
    Thus the gains of the first two decades of independence have actually been halted or reversed
    during the last thirty years. Kenya can get no better deal than recapture the initiative we had at
    independence with the aim of climbing to greater heights in development with the view of
    becoming part of the First World in the next twenty five years. This is the only worthwhile
    ambition we can have for ourselves in the twenty first century. We must rekindle faith in
    ourselves. We must work hard to become a nation of proud people, “a working nation”. That is
    the vision the President gave us on Madaraka Day, first of June 2003.
    In order to live up to this vision, however, we must have a good and clear road map for the future.
    We must plan and plan well. We must make sound choices on what we are doing. We must get
    our priorities right. We must then implement what we choose to do in order to get the results that
    will improve our lives and not those that will set us back several years. In this Recovery Strategy,
    a road map is provided for taking specific actions during the next five years to put Kenya on the
    path to economic prosperity. Some of these actions may, in the short run, be painful and difficult
    to accomplish. In the long run, however, they are bound to pay dividends.
    The Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation recognizes that we have
    actually experienced negative growth over the last ten years in the majority of sectors of our
    economy. We have not only stagnated in terms of economic growth; we have unfortunately lost
    even the ground we had covered. So, in order to begin the serious business of economic growth,
    we must recover the lost ground. This means undertaking radical reforms that will drive our
    recovery process.
    As we moved from a state-controlled economy to a more market-oriented economy in the
    nineteen nineties, we undertook macro-economic reforms which should have served us well were
    we not bogged down by corruption, mismanagement, unmanageable borrowing in the domestic
    market, poorly conceived public investments, wastefulness and general bad governance in
    government and the public sector. We now realize that the unfinished business of reforming the
    state and its operations so that good governance can prevail under democracy and the rule of
    law is vital to the recovery process. This requires our own political resolve and commitment
    before we even tackle the issues of institutional reforms and the enacting of new good governance
    laws. While maintaining a sound macro-economic framework, this Recovery Program gives
    priority to good governance and the rule of law as the foundation of our economic growth. In
    vi
    this regard, reforms are proposed that will deepen and institutionalize growth with macroeconomic
    stability, good governance, the rule of law, public security and social solidarity.
    Although we realized at independence that both physical and social infrastructure are extremely
    vital for the creation of wealth and development in general, and that they are the arteries of our
    economy, we have, over the years, ignored or run down both. Kenya, given her economic
    potential, has one of the lowest connectivity per capita among the Sub-Saharan African
    countries in terms of physical infrastructure, i.e. telephony, roads, air and maritime transport,
    railways, electrical power, financial services and internet provision. In terms of education and
    health—social infrastructure—the momentum built soon after independence was lost twenty years
    ago as services deteriorated through corruption and poor governance.
    Firstly, by providing compulsory and free primary school education, we have set the stage for
    recovering this lost ground. Secondly, by initiating a National Social Health Insurance Scheme,
    we shall endeavor to see that all our citizens have access to proper and sustainable health care
    system. Thirdly, to create the environment for wealth and job creation, the government intends to
    rehabilitate, expand and properly maintain physical and social infrastructure sectors. These
    initiatives are intended to achieve the Milleneum Development Goals within the coming decade.
    In undertaking these and other key development initiatives that this Recovery Plan identifies as
    priorities, the government would like to appeal to civil society, labor, the private sector and all our
    development partners to join us in the mobilization of needed resources for our Recovery
    Program. We are also faced by such emergency issues like the HIV/AIDS pandemic, the adverse
    effects of unpredictable weather, the terrorism menace and political instability in neighboring
    countries. The government will be proactive in dealing with these issues and committing needed
    resources at its disposal. It will strengthen domestic and international partnerships in achieving
    our goals. In this regard, we are establishing the National Economic and Social Council (NESC)
    to provide an arena for partnership for the making, monitoring and evaluation of public policy.
    The NESC, in line with our active participation in the New Partnership for African Development
    (NEPAD), will go a long way towards improving public-private partnership in Kenya’s
    development process under the NARC government. Our diplomatic policy in the context of
    NEPAD should move away from the benign “good neighborliness” stance to more productive
    economic diplomacy.
    With the improvement in our infrastructure and given our commitment to good governance and
    the rule of law, we are determined to create a friendly and affordable environment for investment
    and doing business in Kenya. This will lead to improved efficiency and productivity in the
    productive sectors: agriculture, trade, industry, tourism, mining and other services so that more
    and more of our people can be productively employed and hence live better.
    Whether we are talking of the smallholder farmer, the medium enterprise owner or the captains of
    industry, government must ensure that all receive good services so as to produce and create
    wealth for our nation. The government will, in turn, find the basis for getting its revenue through
    taxation. It must not be forgotten that a good tax regime is that one which is user-friendly and not
    that which is punitive and invites calculated evasion by the taxpayers. The government invites
    Kenyans to pay their taxes while feeling perfectly at home in doing so. During the next five years,
    the government will take urgent measures to enhance public savings and reduce public
    consumption so that substantial resources can be availed for domestic capital formation. In line
    with this policy, the government will seek to enhance the confidence of the public to participate in
    the Nairobi Stock Exchange (NSE). After six months in office, the government is encouraged by
    the confidence of Kenyans in the way public affairs are being managed. This should be
    underscored by sustainable macro-economic stability, increased investments and rapid growth.
    vii
    The process of producing this Recovery Strategy started with our campaign to change Kenya for
    the better and our election Manifesto on democracy and empowerment. I would like to thank all
    those people who worked hard to establish the National Rainbow Coalition and all those who
    prepared and produced the Manifesto. I would also like to thank the young men and women who
    worked on our Post-Election Action Program. But more profoundly, I would like to thank the
    people of Kenya who gave us the mandate to govern this country by voting for NARC
    overwhelmingly in the last general elections.
    There have been a series of consultations with various stakeholders in putting together this
    Recovery Program. In February 2003, a three-day seminar was held in Mombasa to discuss the
    basic analysis proposals that the Ministry was advancing on strategies for economic recovery. We
    used the Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP), the Government Action Plan, the NARC
    Manifesto and the Post-Election Action Plan (PEAP) in preparing the basic document. The
    seminar triggered off a series of consultations with employers, manufacturers, labor unions,
    professionals, civil society organizations, organizations and ministries dealing with the global
    commons and people from Arid and Semi-Arid Lands. More recently, in preparing for the July
    Economic Summit, the views incorporated into the Strategy have been discussed with smaller
    audiences from these stakeholders so that the Ministry can arrive at a realistic framework for
    implementation.
    The government must now express this national solidarity in a development process that is allinclusive
    and that will promote nationhood in Kenya. That is why, in the program of action
    integral to this Recovery Strategy, specific attention has been paid to the Arid And Semi Arid
    Lands (ASALS) to move away from the benign neglect of the past, and to fully develop the
    potentials of these areas.
    I would like to thank all the Cabinet Ministers, Members of Parliament, Government officials,
    consultants, professionals, civil society organizations, development partners and friends of Kenya
    with whom the Ministry consulted and discussed to produce this Recovery Program. I would also
    like to thank the staff of the Ministry of Planning and National Development for the hard and
    steadfast work they have performed.
    Finally, I would like to express my gratitude to His Excellency the President for having supported
    this process with commitment and dedication. The President has given Kenyans confidence that
    change for the better is possible, and its fruits can be reaped in our lifetime. In July this year, the
    President will be launching the Blue Print for long-term economic development in Kenya. This
    Strategy for Economic Recovery over the next five years lays down the foundations for this longterm
    perspective plan to be published as a Sessional Paper.
    If we dedicate ourselves as a hard working nation, a truly unbwogable people, we shall definitely
    transform this nation from a third world nation to a prosperous and modern nation in the next
    twenty-five years. There is work to be done: let us all do it.
    Hon. P. Anyang’ Nyong’o
    Minister for Planning and National Development
    June 2003.
    viii
    EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
    After experiencing moderately high growth rates during the 1960s and 1970s, Kenya’s economic
    performance during the last two decades has been far below its potential. As a result, per capita
    income in constant 1982 prices declined from Kshs 3,813 in 1990 to Kshs 3,360 in 2002. The
    number of people openly unemployed currently stands at over 2 million or 14.6 per cent of the
    labour force, with the youth accounting for 45 percent of the total. The majority of the
    unemployed, though educated, do not have necessary skills. In addition, the number of the
    working poor is staggering comprising primarily subsistence farmers, female-headed households
    and pastoralists. Disguised unemployment is also a serious problem, especially in the public sector.
    The sharp deterioration in economic performance worsened the poverty situation. The number of
    people living in poverty is estimated to have risen from 11 million or 48 per cent of the population
    in 1990 to 17 million or 56 per cent of the population in 2001. Welfare monitoring surveys
    conducted by the Kenyan Government indicate that three quarters of the poor live in rural areas
    while the majority of the urban poor live in slum and peri-urban settlements. In a number of
    Participatory Poverty Assessment (PPA) surveys carried out in the 1990s, the poor attribute their
    poverty to natural calamities, and traditions and cultural beliefs that deny women access to
    productive assets. The deterioration in the standard of living in Kenya is demonstrated well by the
    worsening in key social indicators over the last two decades. Illiteracy rates increased as enrolment
    rates in primary school declined while life expectancy and child mortality worsened. This
    disappointing development has further been complicated by the upsurge of the HIV/AIDS
    pandemic.
    It is against this background that the Government of the National Rainbow Coalition (NARC) was
    elected in December 2002. The major challenge facing the NARC Government is how to restore
    economic growth, generate employment opportunities to absorb the large army of the unemployed,
    particularly the youth, and reduce poverty levels. The overwhelming support given to the new
    Government was a resounding indication by Kenyans that they needed radical changes, changes
    that would make Kenya an attractive place to live and a place to feel at home. The NARC
    Government is convinced that economic recovery is the primary vehicle through which it can
    achieve improved provision of education, health, better infrastructural services and gainful
    employment for Kenyans. The Government is convinced that employment creation is the most
    effective strategy for halting the increasing poverty.
    Immediately after taking office, the new Government commenced the process of preparing an
    Economic Recovery Programme, focusing on the main strategy for reviving the economy and
    creating jobs. The Strategy takes into account existing government policy documents particularly
    the Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) that was issued in 2001. It also incorporated the
    policy proposals contained in the Manifesto of the National Rainbow Coalition (NARC) and Post-
    Election Action Plan. The Strategy document, which was prepared under the auspices of the
    Ministry of Planning and National Development, embodies the views and aspirations of Kenyans,
    which were collected through a process of consultative workshops with a wide cross section of
    stakeholders.
    This Strategy identifies key policy actions necessary to spur the recovery of the Kenyan economy
    and is based on four pillars as well as five cross cutting themes reflecting the overall goals of our
    society. First, the Government recognizes that rapid economic growth will be required over the
    next four years but in an environment of macro economic stability. In this context, measures are
    proposed for enhancing revenue collection, expenditure restructuring, and a monetary policy that
    ix
    will support the achievement of economic growth without putting into jeopardy price stability
    objective.
    Four priority areas will form the core of the macro economic framework. Firstly, the Government
    will seek to maintain revenues at above 21 per cent of GDP to enable the bulk of Government
    expenditures to be financed from tax revenues. This target will be achieved by rationalizing the tax
    rates, broadening the tax base to include the informal sector and modernization of revenue
    administration. Secondly, the Government will restructure expenditures to be more growth and pro
    poor oriented. This will be achieved through the deepening of the MTEF process, implementation
    of the Country Financial Accountability Assessment (CFAA) Action Plan, the Public Expenditure
    Management (PEM) reforms, and utilizing an annual Public Expenditure Review (PER) to inform
    the resource allocation process. Thirdly, the Government will focus its deficit financing on nondomestic
    sources to enable private sector credit to grow despite the limited growth in money
    supply. Fourthly, the Central Bank will pursue a monetary policy consistent with low inflation
    without compromising the recovery effort.
    The second and more fundamental pillar is strengthening of institutions of governance. The
    Government is convinced that good governance underpins sustainable development. In this regard,
    the strategy outlines various reforms in public administration, national security, and law and order.
    It also underscores the centrality of the rule of law as opposed to the ‘rule of man’ in the creation of
    good governance in Kenya. It is emphasized that poor governance and the breakdown of law and
    order have contributed substantially to higher cost of doing business in Kenya, thereby negatively
    impacting on the economy. The programme proposes reforms to enhance efficiency and
    improvement in governance. Focus will be on building capacity for institutions involved in making
    justice accessible to all, and especially the poor.
    Priority actions on the governance front will include implementation of the provisions of the Anti
    Corruption and Economic Crimes Act and the Public Officer’s Ethics Act that were recently
    enacted; strengthening the security agencies with interventions covering training, equipment,
    housing, recruitment and increased collaboration with neighbouring countries; strengthening the
    rule of law through increasing legal staff, both in the judiciary and the Attorney General’s
    Chambers, increasing availability of equipment and facilities, strengthening the Judicial Service
    Commission (JSC) and harmonization of laws; and enhancing local governance through a
    devolution process arising from the ongoing Constitutional Review process. In addition, Public
    Sector reform will be built around the civil service reform programme involving rightsizing, pay
    reform and enhancing efficiency; privatization of commercial state owned enterprises; enhancing
    competition and reforming the regulatory environment to facilitate the formalization of the
    informal sector and reduce the cost of doing business.
    The third pillar is rehabilitation and expansion of physical infrastructure. The Government
    believes Kenya has the potential to become Africa’s commercial centre. To achieve this vision
    requires the country to modernize, and uplift to first world class, its key economic infrastructure.
    Poor infrastructure has been identified as a primary factor that makes production cost excessively
    high, thereby undermining the competitiveness of locally produced goods. In particular, roads,
    railways and telecommunications have had a serious negative impact on production. The Strategy
    has identified policies to rehabilitate the dilapidated infrastructure while building new ones.
    Infrastructural priority actions will fall in six areas. Firstly, rehabilitation, reconstruction and
    expansion of the road network, including the rural access roads. This will be done through
    implementation of the Roads 2000 programme for rural access roads, the concessioning of the
    Mombasa Malaba highway for conversion to a dual carriageway, rehabilitation of the road network
    and strengthening of the legal and institutional framework which includes the Kenya Roads Board
    (KRB). Secondly, energy availability will be improved by linking to the Southern African power
    x
    pool, completion of power generation projects including Olkaria and Sondu Miriu, enhanced
    revenue collection, increasing connectivity and increasing competition in the sector. Thirdly, the
    telecommunications sector will be opened up to increased competition and private sector
    participation. Fourth, the railway sector will be revamped by restructuring and eventually
    privatizing Kenya Railways through concessioning. Fifth, the port of Mombasa will be converted
    to a landlord port and this will enable the private sector to participate in its modernization, while
    construction of a bypass at Dongo Kundu will eliminate the need for ferry services and potentially
    enable the conversion of the port into a free-port. Air transport will be improved through
    modernization and expansion of facilities and increasing the role of the private sector.
    The fourth pillar is investment in the human capital of the poor. The Government believes a welleducated
    and healthy population is an important factor in enhancing productivity and the overall
    performance of the economy. While the impact on the economy will not be immediate, there is no
    doubt investment in human capital is an important ingredient to the realization of poverty reduction
    objective. Priority interventions in the socio economic sphere will focus on seven areas. These
    include putting in place measures to achieve 100 percent net enrolment at primary level; enhancing
    secondary education by expanding bursaries to cater for at least 10 percent of enrolled students,
    rehabilitating laboratories and classrooms and standardizing teacher student ratios at 35:1;meeting
    the health challenge through the establishment of a comprehensive National Social Health
    Insurance Fund (NSHIF) which will provide both in patient and out patient services to all Kenyans;
    continuing the battle against the HIV/AIDS pandemic by putting in place an integrated approach to
    prevention, increasing community involvement and ensuring the special health care needs of the
    infected are met; carrying out legal and institutional reforms to enhance employment creation,
    reforming the system of arbitration to minimize employment disputes and strengthening the role of
    productivity measurement in the labour reward process; conversion of the NSSF into a pension
    fund; and provision of low cost housing.
    The Government strongly believes that recovery is primarily the result of improvements in the
    productive sectors of the economy including agriculture, tourism, trade and industry. Existing
    research suggests that factors responsible for the poor performance of the productive sectors other
    than those already discussed include the high cost of engaging in productive activities, high cost of
    capital particularly for medium and small scale enterprises (MSEs), lack of supportive services and
    weak institutions. The programme outlines specific policies and institutional reforms that will be
    implemented in order to revive the various sectors. Also emphasized in all sector policies is the
    removal of various regulatory impediments that increase the cost of doing business.
    Productive sectors’ interventions will be focused on 5 areas. Interventions in agriculture will focus
    on providing a single enabling legislation to replace the large number of excising legislations in the
    sector, rationalizing roles and functions of agricultural institutions to empower resource poor
    farmers and increase institutional efficiency, strengthening extension services and increasing
    smallholder access to credit. Institutional reform will also include revamping the co-operative
    movement by reviewing the Cooperative societies Act to improve governance in the sector and
    addressing issues of indebtedness in the sector. Interventions in the manufacturing sector will be
    built around an Industrial Master Plan which will lay the groundwork for the first phase of
    Kenya’s industrialization strategy and restore the sector to a rapid growth path. The tourism sector
    will be promoted through increased funding for marketing, upgrading the tourist police force to
    make it more effective and diversification of markets, both in terms of geographical distribution
    and customer base. The Government will also be putting in place an Investment Code to
    consolidate investment incentives, protection and institutional framework in a single legislation to
    establish a one-stop office for investment promotion activities. Export promotion will be carried
    out within the framework of an export development strategy to ensure maximum export earnings
    are achieved for minimum promotional costs. The Government will also promote the Micro and
    xi
    Small Enterprises Sector (MSE) by finalizing and implementing a Sessional paper on the sector,
    focusing on employment creation and formalization of informal activities.
    The state of the financial sector is very important in supporting economic recovery.. The recovery
    programme outlines the main challenges facing the country’s financial sector and identifies priority
    policies and institutional reforms to ensure a vibrant financial sector supportive of the country’s
    development programmes.
    Financial sector reform will be built around a Financial Sector Assessment Programme (FSAP)
    which will identify the strengths, weaknesses and synergies in the sector. Among the issues to be
    considered are whether there is adequate justification for an overall financial sector regulator..
    Financial sector reform will concentrate on reducing the interest rate spread, enhancing investor
    confidence and consumer protection in the sector, dealing with the problem of Non Performing
    Loans (NPLs) and creating an independent insurance regulator.
    The Government recognizes that the benefits of economic growth may still not reach all the people,
    particularly the most disadvantaged members of the population. Consistent with the Government’s
    goal of fighting poverty, the programme outlines some social sector interventions that are critical in
    addressing the problem of poverty. The pro-poor spending proposals particularly in health and
    education are important in reducing the state of inequality.
    The Government is aware of the weak implementation record that has in the past characterized its
    economic management. This has cost the country dearly in terms of withdrawal of much needed
    budgetary support by our development partners leading to non-completion of projects. The NARC
    Administration is fully committed to implementing the policies contained in this recovery
    programme. In this regard, the Government will put in place an implementation framework to
    ensure that the programme is implemented. To assist in this process, an implementation matrix,
    which is attached to this document, will be used to monitor and evaluate progress at each stage of
    implementation.
    Priorities will be in three areas. Firstly, establishment and institutionalizing a mechanism for
    monitoring and evaluation following the work already done in the Ministry of Planning and
    National Development. Secondly, establishment of the National Economic and Social Council
    (NSEC) through an Act of Parliament. Thirdly, ensuring that the implementation matrix is adhered
    to.
    Finally, the Government acknowledges that it is committed to improving the enabling environment
    for business and will strive to remove the various impediments that may hamper private sector
    development.
    1
    1. INTRODUCTION
    Kenya’s economic performance during the last two decades has been far below its potential.
    Consequently, per capita income in constant 1982 prices declined from US$271 in 1990 to
    US$239 in 2002. The number of people openly unemployed currently stands at over 2 million or
    14.6 per cent of the labour force, with the youth accounting for 45 percent of the total. The
    majority of the unemployed, though educated, do not have necessary skills. In addition, the
    number of the working poor is staggering comprising primarily subsistence farmers, femaleheaded
    households and slum dwellers. Disguised unemployment is also a serious problem,
    especially in the public sector.
    The persistent poor economic performance worsened the poverty situation. The number of people
    living in poverty is estimated to have risen from 11 million or 48 per cent of the population in
    1990 to 17 million or 56 per cent of the population in 2001. Welfare monitoring surveys
    conducted by the Kenyan Government indicate that three quarters of the poor live in rural areas
    while the majority of the urban poor live in slum and peri-urban settlements. In a number of
    Participatory Poverty Assessment (PPA) surveys carried out in the 1990s, the poor attribute their
    poverty to natural calamities, and traditions and cultural beliefs that deny women access to
    productive assets. The deterioration in the standard of living in Kenya is demonstrated well by the
    worsening in key social indicators over the last two decades. Illiteracy rates increased as
    enrolment rates in primary school declined while life expectancy and child mortality worsened.
    This disappointing development has further been complicated by the upsurge of the HIV/AIDS
    pandemic.
    The major challenge facing the NARC Government is how to restore economic growth, generate
    employment opportunities to absorb the large army of the unemployed, particularly the youth,
    and reduce poverty levels. The overwhelming support given to the new Government when it was
    elected in December, 2002 was a resounding indication by Kenyans that they needed radical
    changes, changes that would make Kenya a better home for all Kenyans. The NARC Government
    is convinced that economic recovery is the primary vehicle through which it can meet Kenyans
    expectations. The main expectations are improved provision of education, health, better
    infrastructural services and gainful employment. The Government is convinced that employment
    creation is the most effective strategy for halting the increasing poverty.
    Immediately after taking office, the new Government commenced the process of preparing an
    Economic Recovery Programme, focusing on the main strategy for reviving the economy and
    creating jobs. The Strategy takes into account existing government policy documents particularly
    the Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) that was issued in 2001. It also incorporated the
    policy proposals contained in the Manifesto of the National Rainbow Coalition (NARC) and Post-
    Election Action Plan. The Strategy document, which was prepared under the auspices of the
    Ministry of Planning and National Development, embodies the views and aspirations of Kenyans,
    which were collected through a process of consultative workshops with a wide cross section of
    stakeholders.
    This Strategy identifies key policy measures and programmes that the Government is committed
    to pursue over the next five years. Implementation of these measures will create the conditions
    necessary to achieve the desired rapid economic growth, wealth and employment creation and
    poverty reduction.
    2
    The strategy report is organized as follows:-
    • Chapter 2 highlights the macro-economic policies necessary to support the achievement of the
    desired economic growth while maintaining price stability.
    • Chapter 3 presents the measures the Government intends to take to strengthen institutions of
    governance and the rule of law.
    • Chapter 4 describes policies the Government will take in the next five years to improve
    service delivery by the public sector, which includes, among others, civil service, local
    authorities and public entities.
    • Chapter 5 sets out the programmes the Government intends to implement to modernize and
    uplift to first world class, the country’s physical infrastructure.
    • Chapter 6 explains specific policies and institutional reforms the Government plans to
    implement to revive the productive sectors, which include, among others, agriculture, tourism
    and trade and industry.
    • Chapter 7 outlines some social sector interventions that the Government plans to take to
    alleviate the problem of poverty, conscious of the fact that the benefits of economic growth
    may still not reach the poor.
    • Chapter 8 presents specific programmes that will be implemented to tap the potential of the
    Arid and Semi-Arid Lands (ASALS).
    • Chapter 9 discusses policy reforms that require to be implemented in a number of service
    sectors in order to create the conditions necessary to achieve the desired rapid economic
    growth. The sectors include the financial sector, land administration, environment,
    information and technology and regional authorities.
    • Chapter 10 describes the process of monitoring the implementation of this Strategy in order to
    ensure realization of the expected outcomes.
    • Annexes to this document give further statistical details on the various key economic and
    financial indicators and an implementation matrix. The matrix provides details of specific
    policy actions by sector and identifies specific government agency expected to implement the
    policy action in question. The matrix also indicates the time frame when specific actions will
    be implemented.
    3
    2. MACRO ECONOMIC FRAMEWORK
    2.1 Macroeconomic Objectives
    The Government is committed to the maintenance of a stable macroeconomic framework, but
    within the context of structural reforms that will lead to wealth and employment creation aimed
    at poverty reduction. The key macroeconomic objectives for the period 2003-2007 include:
    • Creating 500,000 jobs annually;
    • Reducing poverty level by at least 5 percentage points from the current 56.8 percent level;
    • Achieving a high real GDP growth rate - - rising from an estimated 1.1 percent in 2002 to
    2.3 percent in 2003 and 7 percent in 2006;
    • Containing average annual inflation rate to below 5 percent;
    • Increasing official foreign exchange reserves from US$ 1.1 billion or 2.8 months of import
    cover in 2002 to US$ 1.7 billion or 3.5 months of import cover in 2007;
    • Containing the current account deficit in the balance of payments to an average of 6.2 per
    cent of GDP; and
    • Increasing domestic savings so as to enable higher levels of investment for sustainable
    development.
    The projected current account deficit is much higher than the average for the last three years
    mainly due to the large investments expected to take place particularly in infrastructure whose
    import content tends to be high.
    To achieve the desired growth and employment creation targets, Kenya will require an increase
    in ratio of gross fixed capital formation to GDP from 16.8 percent in 2002 to about 23 percent in
    2007. Investment particularly by the private sector is envisaged to recover assisted mainly by
    the stable macroeconomic conditions and envisaged improvement in governance following
    implementation of the proposed far-reaching reforms in this area. Much of the investment
    recovery will be financed with domestic savings, which are projected to rise from 10.7 percent
    of GDP in 2002 to 15.8 percent in 2007. To finance the remaining resource gap, external
    resources of at least US$2.2 billion will be needed by public sector and US$1.1 billion by the
    private sector over the next five years.
    The sector expected to lead in reviving the economy will be building and construction,
    which is projected to grow annually by 16.7 per cent on average. Consequently, building and
    construction share of GDP will rise from 2.3 per cent in 2002 to 4.2 per cent in 2007 driven
    primarily by increased public investments in infrastructure described in detail in Chapter 5. The
    other major source of growth is manufacturing sector, which is projected to grow during the
    recovery period at an annual average rate of 8.6 per cent compared with 1.2 per cent in 2002.
    Consequently, the share of the manufacturing sector in GDP will rise from 13 percent in 2002 to
    15.7 per cent in 2007 driven mainly by higher capacity utilisation and reduced costs of
    production as a result of improved business environment resulting from improved governance,
    public sector efficiency as well as improved security situation.
    The agriculture sector, which has been faced with myriad structural problems, is expected to
    grow by an average of 3.1 per cent annually during the recovery period as investments in rural
    infrastructure, agricultural research and extension services begin to yield desired results.
    Tourism is also expected to make a significant contribution to the economic recovery, growing
    4
    by an annual average of 5.4 per cent over the period. Similarly, the Information and
    Communications Technology (ICT) sector is expected to contribute significantly to the overall
    growth, increasing by annual average growth rate of 5 per cent. ICT has the potential and
    capacity to grow even faster as other sectors begin to adopt IT solutions and management
    techniques. The strategy therefore is to make Kenya a less agricultural-dependent country
    by diversifying to other sectors while still recognizing the strategic position of agriculture
    in fighting poverty. The agricultural sector share of GDP will consequently decline from 24.0
    per cent in 2002 to 22.2 per cent in 2007.
    2.2 Macroeconomic Policy Framework
    The macroeconomic policy framework and institutional changes described below will be put in
    place in order to achieve the desired growth, employment creation and poverty reduction.
    2.2.1 Monetary Policy Reforms
    The main focus of monetary policy is to ensure that growth in money supply is consistent with
    economic growth, employment creation and a viable balance of payments position without
    putting undue pressure on inflation. In the last five years, monetary policy aimed at maintaining
    a low stable inflation while providing adequate liquidity to enable the country achieves its
    development needs. To a large extent the pursuit of low stable inflation was achieved. As a
    result, the shilling exchange rate, which since 1993 has been market determined, has been fairly
    stable particularly in the last two years. Although interest rates remain a source of concern,
    considerable progress has been made in lowering them in line with reduced inflation. Concerns
    on perceived high interest rate problem will be addressed through measures to improve the
    effectiveness of the financial system. In this connection, focus of monetary policy will be to:
    • Contain inflation to below 5.0 per cent;
    • Maintain a competitive exchange rate consistent with an export-driven economic
    recovery;
    • Maintain an interest rate structure that promotes financial savings and ensures
    efficient allocation of the same; and
    • Ensure adequate growth in credit to the private sector.
    To achieve the set monetary objectives during the recovery period, overall money supply is
    expected to grow annually by 10.0 per cent which allows for the build-up in reserves, and
    expansion in credit to the private sector of about 11.0 per cent annually to support expected
    recovery in business activity and investments. The financial programme does not envisage much
    government borrowing from the domestic banking system, as a large proportion of government
    borrowing requirement will be financed from external sources.
    The Government will undertake a number of reforms to achieve the set monetary policy
    objectives. These reforms include:-
    • Strengthening of the Monetary Policy Committee by expanding its membership to
    include people from outside government with expertise in financial and monetary
    policy disciplines. Adoption of this reform will improve the formulation of monetary
    policy;
    • Adopting a more transparent conduct of monetary policy by publishing minutes of the
    Monetary Policy Committee a month after the relevant meeting. The purpose of this
    proposal is to reduce information asymmetry and to improve public confidence in the
    monetary authority;
    5
    • Empowering the Central Bank of Kenya to be responsible for issuing banking licence,
    and when necessary revoking it;
    • Enhancing the analytical as well as the operational capacity of the Central Bank in
    order to improve overall monetary policy management and to ensure that the Central
    Bank is more responsive to the emerging needs of the economy;
    • Strengthening the co-ordination mechanism for fiscal and monetary policy to ensure
    that the conduct of fiscal policy does not undermine monetary policy objectives.
    The Central Bank will largely rely on Open Market Operations (OMO) to implement monetary
    policy. In this context, the Central Bank will consider reviewing downwards the cash ratio
    requirement in order to reduce intermediation costs in line with economic and financial
    developments.
    2.2.2 Budgetary and Public Expenditure Reforms
    A factor that has significantly contributed to the weak economic situation is the high level of
    domestic debt and the associated high interest rates. To mobilise the necessary investment to
    achieve the desired growth and employment creation it will be necessary for lending interest
    rates to decline significantly. Conscious of this, the Government will continue to tighten fiscal
    policy with the objective of reducing domestic debt and thereby reducing pressure on interest
    rates. Therefore, the overall deficit on a commitment basis (excluding grants) is programmed to
    decline from 6.2 per cent of GDP in 2002/03 to 3.7 per cent by 2005/06, allowing for a decline
    in net domestic borrowing from 4.2 per cent of GDP in 2001/02 to a net domestic debt
    repayment by 2005/06. Net external borrowing will rise from negative 1.4 per cent of GDP in
    2001/2002 to 3.4 per cent in 2005/2006. In order to achieve these fiscal objectives the
    Government will undertake reforms on both tax revenue and public expenditure as discussed
    below.
    Tax Reforms: Kenya’s tax in relation to GDP is higher than that for many low income countries.
    However, Kenya’s tax regime remains complex and cumbersome making it costly for business.
    It is characterized by uneven and unfair taxes, a narrow tax base with very high rates and rates
    dispersions with respect to trade, and low compliance. Measures will be taken to deepen the tax
    reform, which is aimed at reducing the tax burden particularly on businesses and to broaden the
    tax base.
    In this regard, the following actions will be put in place to achieve revenue aims of the
    Government.
    • Removing suspended import duties and all remaining discretionary duty exemptions in
    order to reduce the scope for tax evasion;
    • Consolidating all tax collections through the Kenya Revenue Authority(KRA) by
    optimally using the PIN and VAT registration systems;
    • Expanding the tax base, particularly to target the informal sector. This will create
    space for the Government to reduce some of the tax rates;
    • Harmonizing Kenya’s tax regime to bring it in line with those for other members of the
    East African Community; and
    • Rationalizing personal income tax by raising tax threshold and reducing the number of
    tax brackets.
    In addition, steps will be taken to modernize tax administration infrastructure of KRA in order to
    strengthen its capacity to effectively enforce tax collection. This will also improve
    administrative efficiency and ensure greater compliance and collection of tax arrears. When this
    has been accomplished, the compliance costs of business will progressively come down.
    6
    Public Expenditure Reforms: Public expenditure management in Kenya is characterized by the
    following: (a) significant variations between budgeted and actual expenditure; (b) inadequate
    recording and tracking of donor funded expenditure; (c) an administrative classification rather
    than an economic one; (d) failure to comply with multi-year Medium Term Expenditure
    Framework (MTEF) projections and; (e) poor budgetary control leading to domestic arrears
    (pending bills).
    To date, the reform measures taken, including adoption of the MTEF process and posting
    finance officers to assist accounting officers, have not achieved the desired results.
    Government expenditure priorities comprise the following: (a) reducing the overall expenditure
    in relation to GDP in order to reduce the budget deficit; (b) refocusing expenditures in favour of
    development, operations and maintenance and poverty-alleviation expenditures and; (c)
    reducing wage related expenditures to 8.5 per cent of GDP by the end of FY 2005/06.
    Achieving these objectives will require the Government to implement further expenditure
    reform measures which among others, will include the following:-
    • Deepening of the MTEF process to ensure proper coordination of policy, planning and
    budgeting in accordance identified national development priorities. In this connection,
    additional budgetary resources would only be allocated to support new policy
    initiatives. Reforms in this area will focus on strengthening macro-economic analysis,
    reviewing budget procedures to ensure budget formulation process is appropriately
    integrated with the fiscal strategy;
    • Strengthening public expenditure management by reviewing the non-budgetary flows
    to bring them into the budget, institutionalizing public expenditure review to become
    an annual exercise for informing new reforms that should be undertaken on
    expenditure management. The Government will implement recommendations
    contained in the 2003 Public Expenditure Review (PER) and the 2001 Country
    Financial Accountability Assessment (CFAA) Action Plans;
    • Improving reporting and accountability by establishing regular reporting of flows in
    and out of government accounts, implementing the Integrated Financial Management
    System (IFMIS), strengthening oversight bodies and automating the internal audit
    function;
    • Developing a strategy to clear pending bills by paying them once the verification
    exercise is completed. To avoid recurrence of pending bills in future, the Government
    will take measures to strengthen expenditure control at commitment level, and to
    operationalize Public Procurement and Disposal of Assets Bill once it is enacted as a
    law.
    • Developing criteria for dealing with stalled projects to determine those that are viable
    and should be completed and those that are not viable and should be liquidated.
    2.2.3 Expected Impacts on Employment and Poverty
    Employment Outcome: The core aim of the economic recovery programme is to achieve
    economic growth rates that are consistent with the creation of 500,000 jobs annually. The
    translation of economic growth into jobs depends on successful implementation of the Action
    Plan.
    Kenya’s informal sector provided an estimated 936,000 jobs over 2001-2002, while the formal
    non-agricultural sector lost 18,000 jobs in 2001 but gained in 2002 registering 21,500 new jobs.
    Since it is unlikely that the formal sector will annually create 500,000 jobs over the medium
    term, the bulk of employment creation will continue to be in small enterprises. Therefore the
    7
    policy focus during the recovery period will increasingly be on the small business
    enterprises. Over the period 2003-2007, a total of 2,636,130 jobs are expected to be created, out
    of which 12 percent will be from the formal sector and the balance of 88 per cent from small
    business enterprises.
    Poverty Outcomes: On the assumption that income inequality does not worsen and population
    growth remains at 2 per cent per annum, the poverty rate is estimated to decline from 56.7per
    cent to 51.8per cent - an improvement of 5 percentage points. While this may appear a small
    gain, it is nonetheless a substantial improvement given that poverty has been rising in the last
    two decades and it will take a long time to reverse the trend in full.
    Growth in Wealth Gains: The false dichotomy between the formal and informal sectors in our
    economy has only been meaningful in as far as the small enterprises remain small, are denied
    needed services, and infrastructure, and do not pay taxes. This strategy for economic recovery
    progressively seeks to eliminate this dichotomy by providing infrastructure and services,
    particularly financial, to small and medium enterprises and by ensuring that they pay taxes.
    8
    3. GOVERNANCE, SECURITY AND RULE OF LAW
    3.1 Governance
    Most of the problems bedevilling Kenya and its people arise from the many years of bad
    governance and poor economic management. The rapidly growing poverty, food insecurity and
    economic collapse are largely related to the previous government’s inability to manage the
    country affairs in the best way possible. The poor management, excessive discretion in
    government, appointments of people of dubious characters and political interference and lack of
    respect for professionalism led to widespread corruption, gross abuse of public office in many
    government departments and incorrigible tolerance – if not outright encouragement of
    mediocrity and lack of standards. For these reasons the solution of the current national crisis is
    to be found in our ability to reclaim professionalism and confidence in public officers, and
    guaranteeing efficiency.
    In an effort to revive the economy and meet the expectations of Kenyans for better living
    conditions, the starting point is better governance, improved security in the country and
    restoration of the rule of law. These steps are necessary because bad governance, insecurity
    and breakdown of the rule of law have led to misappropriation of productive resources thereby
    undermining economic development by discouraging investors, both local and foreign, raising
    the cost of doing business, and leading to the withholding of financial support by Kenya’s
    development partners. The impact of these adverse developments are manifested in the decline
    in economic performance, increase in poverty and galloping unemployment over the years.
    The NARC Government has demonstrated strong commitment to addressing Kenya’s problems
    of governance. The measures already taken or in the process of being implemented include:
    • The creation of a new Ministry of Justice and Constitutional Affairs and a new
    department, under the President’s Office, in charge of Governance and Ethics;
    • The passage into law in May 2003 of two key pieces of legislation:-
    (a) The Anti Corruption and Economic Crimes Act which created the Kenya Anti-
    Corruption Commission with responsibility to investigate corruption and economic
    crimes; and
    (b) The Public Officers Ethics Act which provides for codes of conduct for all public
    officers including members of parliament, the executive and the judiciary, and
    which compels all officers to declare their wealth including that of their spouses and
    dependent children.
    • Arraignments in Court of persons involved in corruption. The Attorney General and
    the Anti-Corruption Police Unit are producing quarterly reports on progress made in
    investigating and prosecuting cases of corruption;
    • The establishment of task forces to review all contracts relating to jobs undertaken for
    Government and for which payments are pending;
    • The recommencement of the constitutional review process in April 2003 with a view to
    early establishment of a new constitution that will provide a more effective political and
    institutional framework for governance;
    • The programming for legislation of other governance-related bills such as the Public
    Procurement and Disposal of Public Assets, Financial Management and Accountability
    Bill, etc within the 2003/04 Financial Year; and
    9
    • The establishment of a Commission to investigate and report on the Goldenburg
    scandal so that proper prosecution can follow and Government can recover some of the
    money.
    Further measures that are contemplated to strengthen governance and human rights include the
    creation of the Office of Ombudsman to be responsible for investigating reported cases of
    official abuse of power and establishment of a Truth and Justice Commission to deal with past
    abuses of human rights and other injustices.
    3.2 Security
    A well functioning police force is vital for maintenance of peace and security and, enforcement
    of the rule of law. In the last two decades the Kenya public security system deteriorated to the
    point where the government was unable to guarantee its citizens personal security, and that of
    their property. This had emerged because of low morale in the police force, low
    professionalism, inadequate allocation of required resources, and endemic corruption in the
    force.
    The contribution of the efficient enforcement of law, the maintenance of public safety, and the
    guaranteeing of law and order to economic growth, and the improvement of quality of life
    cannot be over-emphasized. This sector is crucial in creating an enabling environment for
    private sector-led growth and development. The failure of the sector to deal effectively with the
    pervasive governance issues, the existence of unacceptably high level of crime and delays in
    determination of cases in court have all served to reduce the competitiveness of Kenya as a
    destination for investment. In addition to these problems, the police will encounter new
    challenges, which include increased cases of sophisticated crimes such as cyber-crime,
    terrorism, money laundering and drug trafficking.
    In order to effectively address the above challenges facing the police force, the Government will
    implement the following:
    • Increase the overall police to population ratio from the current ratio of 1:850 to 1:450;
    • Develop and implement a public education programme to build trust between the
    police force and the public;
    • Enhance police effectiveness and service coverage through recruitment and re-training
    on modern technology and emphasizing the need to operate within the law;
    • Provide police force with modern equipment and technology;
    • Improve housing and terms and conditions of work for the police force. As a first
    complete all the stalled housing projects within the Recovery Programme period;
    • Review and enact appropriate laws to deal with modern crime challenges in terrorism,
    money laundering, cyber-crime, tax evasion, among other areas; and
    • Develop and enforce a framework for cross border and territorial waters’ policing, and
    collaborative security management.
    3.3 Rule of Law
    In democratic society, the rights of the individual citizen and other protection and promotion
    under the Constitution by all organs of the government, is a cardinal principle of good
    governance. It is the Rule of Law, not the rule of man, that must prevail in a democratic society.
    Dispensation of justice and its access, which is a key ingredient of the rule of law, , has faced
    various challenges in the past. Among the challenges facing the sub-sector are delays in hearing
    and determination of cases; interference with the Judiciary and poor enforcement of the rule of
    10
    law; inadequate office accommodation for courts and Judges; inadequate budgetary provisions;
    prevalence of corruption in the Judiciary and lack of meritocracy; in the promotion of judicial
    officers, cumbersome laws and procedures and over-use of custodial sanctions; and human
    resource capacity constraints including inadequate capacity for drafting and enactment of laws.
    In order to strengthen the rule of law, the Judicial Service Commission approved and gazetted
    the Judicial Code of Conduct and Ethics following the enactment of the Public Officers Ethics
    Act. Under this Code, Judicial officers will be required, like other public officers, to declare
    their wealth including that of their spouses and dependent children. A committee of enquiry
    into corruption in the Judiciary has also been appointed and is expected to lead to additional
    measures to strengthen the Judiciary. In addition, the Government has taken action to strengthen
    the rule of law by appointing a new Chief Justice and senior personnel at the Office of the
    Attorney General. Further, to ensure that the laws of the country remain relevant to meeting the
    emerging challenges the Government has strengthened the Law Review Commission by
    appointing new and capable Commissioners.
    To improve the efficiency and the effectiveness of legal and Judicial processes, the Government
    plans to undertake the following reform measures:
    • Recruit more professional legal staff for the administration of justice and enhance
    training;
    • Modernize administration of registries in the sector by accelerating the ongoing
    computerization;
    • Facilitate the creation of alternative dispute resolution mechanisms including
    arbitration and ensuring these decisions are recognized in law; and
    • Allocating additional resources to commercial courts to facilitate recruitment of more
    Judges and establishment of regional commercial courts to ensure speedy
    determination of commercial disputes.
    3.4 Prison Services
    The prison services are charged with confinement and rehabilitation of offenders. Such
    rehabilitations can contribute to economic recovery if their graduates can be transformed into
    useful members of society. To this end, the service aims to equip the offenders with practical
    and technical skills, which will make them more productive members of the society. The
    Department has however been faced with numerous challenges including congestion in prisons,
    inhuman and degrading conditions for both inmates and prison officers; delay in trials further
    compounding the congestion problem; and inadequate budgetary provisions for operations and
    maintenance.
    To address these challenges, the government in collaboration with other stakeholders will
    implement the following measures:
    • Implement in full the Community Service Order Act, which allows persons convicted of
    minor offences to serve their time outside prisons , and will have the advantage of
    reducing the cost of correction and decongesting the prisons;
    • Provide more financial resources to enable the institutions, expand accommodation
    facilities to reduce congestion and acquire equipment necessary for training of inmates,
    including improving housing and conditions of work for prison officers;
    • Rationalize the role of prisons in line with modern prison management practices; and
    • Retrain prison officers to equip them with modern corrective skills in line with the
    changing society needs.
    11
    4. PUBLIC SECTOR REFORMS
    4.1 Introduction
    Improving public administration is essential to economic recovery. The sector is excessively
    large thereby absorbing inordinately large amount of national resources. The sector is also
    characterized by wastefulness and inefficiency. Consequently, the sector has become a
    bottleneck to the overall development of Kenya. Therefore, one of the priorities of the economic
    recovery strategy is to downsize the public sector and make it more efficient and investorfriendly
    in order to promote private sector-led growth and poverty reduction.
    4.2 Civil Service Reforms
    The Government has been carrying out civil service reforms over the past decade focusing on
    downsizing the core civil service (excluding teachers and disciplined forces), harmonizing pay
    and benefits and putting in place interventions to enhance efficiency of the civil service. In
    particular, civil service downsizing has seen the civil service decline from over 272,000 in 1991
    to 193,000 in 2002. This happened as a result of Voluntary Early Retirement (VER) scheme,
    compulsory retrenchment exercise as well as, the impact of natural attrition since a freeze on
    new employment was enforced. Despite these reforms, the civil service wage bill has grown to
    reach the current 9.0 per cent of GDP. It is worth noting that while the various measures reduced
    the size of the civil service significantly, there was, at the same time fresh recruitment for
    essential services of health, security (police and prisons) and the teaching service. Additionally
    in July 2001, the Government raised the house allowances for public servants to approximate
    market levels. However, there is urgent need to carry out an audit of the civil service payroll to
    find out if there are other factors that may have contributed to the high wage bill.
    The Government is committed to accelerating the Public Service Reform to create a leaner,
    efficient, motivated and more productive Public Service that concentrates public finance and
    human resources on the delivery of core government services. Reforms will also focus on
    providing adequate incentives to attract and retain skilled personnel to achieve a pay structure
    and size of the civil service consistent with both macroeconomic objectives and a sustainable
    wage bill. These reforms will include rationalization of ministerial functions with a view to
    eliminating duplication of functions and divesting from services that can more efficiently be
    provided by the private sector.
    Key elements of the civil service reform strategy and activities that are envisaged for
    implementation by June 2004 include the following:
    • Developing an ICT policy for the civil service by June 2004 to progressively transform
    into an e-government in a coordinated manner. This will increase efficiency in
    government and at the same time help to reduce pilferage and misappropriation of
    funds;
    • Operationalising the ICT policy in the public service including full implementation all
    ICT programmes such as the Integrated Payroll and Personnel Database (IPPD)
    system for both the civil service and the teachers’ service to provide a basis for
    improved establishment control and integrity of the payroll system;
    • Accelerating the ongoing ministerial rationalization and developing strategic plans for
    ministries/department in order to allow for: proper utilization of resources on clearly
    identified core functions, determination of appropriate staffing levels, objective
    appraisal of staff, better and improved method of supervising staff based on
    achievement of set targets, among others.
    12
    • The Government will after every 5 years review the structure and functions of
    Government in order to meet the emerging challenges;
    • Undertaking job evaluation to form a basis for determining a rational grading
    structure and terms of service for civil servants. This will be undertaken every five
    years.
    • Introducing a contributory pension/superannuation scheme and a comprehensive
    medical insurance scheme for all civil servants in FY 2003/04.
    • Developing, introducing and institutionalizing performance based management
    practices in the public service;
    • Undertaking service delivery surveys in all ministries/departments and developing and
    installing service charters with clear service bench marks and standards in order to
    enhance efficiency, transparency and accountability in service delivery;
    • Carrying out an immediate and comprehensive benchmarking exercise to identify the
    minimum costs of delivering Government services and thus enable cost reductions in
    Government activities;
    • Developing a clear recruitment and training policy aimed at ensuring proper supply
    and development of skills in the civil service and pegging promotion on both
    performance and training;
    • Putting all Permanent Secretaries and Chief Executives of parastatals on performance
    contracts; and
    • Establishment by June 2004 of a Permanent Public Sector Pay Review Board to ensure
    that from that point in time pay and benefits in the public service will be rationalized,
    market oriented and performance based.
    4.3 Reform of Local Authorities
    The Government is committed to improving governance and service delivery at the local level.
    The ongoing Constitutional Review is likely to result in increased responsibilities for local
    authorities requiring greater managerial competence. Secondly, business enterprises operate in
    localities for which local authorities are responsible for essential services. Thus there are strong
    reasons to enhance the local government reforms initiative. To date reforms implemented
    include improving local finances through the establishment of the Local Authority Transfer
    Fund (LATF) and rationalization of local business licences. Other measures that are linked to
    the LATF system have been introduced to improve local authorities capacity to manage their
    finances and service delivery. One ongoing initiative is the Integrated Financial Management
    System (IFMS), which is being piloted in eight local authorities and is expected to be replicated
    in other local authorities in a systematic and phased manner.
    The local government reform is now entering a consolidation phase during which ongoing
    reforms will be accelerated and strengthened. This phase will include:
    • Reviewing of local authorities to ensure that only the viable and sustainable one are
    retained;
    • Accelerating the ongoing Kenya Local Government Reform Programme (KLGRP)
    including expanding the coverage IFMS, strengthening monitoring and implementing
    the local Government reform initiatives;
    13
    • Implementing staff rationalization and rightsizing in all local authorities with a view to
    reducing the wage bill, which is currently excessively high, and to improve efficiency
    and effectiveness in service delivery.
    • Reviewing the Local Government Act in line with constitutional Review proposals with
    a view to giving the Local Authorities more autonomy and enhancing their capacity to
    perform their roles and removing conflicts with central government;
    • Introducing information technology in personnel management, which in conjunction
    with IFMS will lead to improvement in performance and promote good governance;
    and
    • Implementing the recommendations of the Constitutional of Kenya Review
    Commission when enacted.
    4.4 Public Enterprise Reforms
    The Government remains fully committed to moving away from commercial activities that can
    be performed more efficiently and effectively by the private sector. In this context, the
    Government recognizes that the private sector provides the basis for long-term sustainable
    economic growth. For this reason, the process of reducing the role of the government in
    commercial activities, which has been on-going since the early nineties, will continue especially
    through accelerating the privatization programme. In this connection, the Government in the
    medium term will implement the following on-going privatization programme:
    • The Government will prepare by end of September 2003 a detailed strategy on further
    liberalization of the telecommunication sector and an action plan with a clear time frame on
    the privatization of Telkom Kenya by the end of June 2004/05. The full liberalization of the
    telecommunications sector will effectively render Telkom Kenya’s monopoly a thing of the
    past.
    • Prepare Kenya Railways Corporation(KRC) for concessioning, with the International
    Finance Corporation (IFC) acting as the Government’s transaction advisor. The KRC is
    currently heavily indebted and any attempt to concession it without jump-starting the
    financial and operational performance will be futile. Towards this end, IFC’s will assist in
    creating a substantial commercial capability for KRC by designing a suitable three-year
    management contract by end of June 2003. The management contract will put KRC on a
    sound operational and commercial footing with capability of handling six million tonnes
    from Mombasa to the hinterland within two years of the contract. During the third-year of
    the contract, the Government with the assistance of IFC will arrange to concession the KRC
    to a successful bidder in a competitive bidding process.
    • Transform Kenya Ports Authority(KPA) into a landlord port by June 2004.
    • Complete the strategic options study for the Mombasa container terminal operations,
    including the option for a possible expansion and establishment of a second container
    terminal at the port by December 2004.
    • Introduce preferred arrangement for private sector participation (PSP) by June 2004.
    • Reduce its direct equity in the Kenya Power and Lighting Company (KPLC) to below 39
    percent in order to remove it from the purview of the State Corporation’s Act. Given the
    existing ownership of KPLC with the Government shares standing at 40.41 percent, NSSF
    10.81 percent and private sector accounting for 48.77 percent and since NSSF is by
    definition a State Corporation, KPLC is also by extension a State Corporation.
    Simultaneously, measures will be put in place to ensure that these socially important but
    14
    commercially unviable activities such as rural electrification continue. These measures are
    elaborated in Chapter 5. The Government recognizes that there is an urgent need for further
    legislative reforms to strengthen the regulatory function of Electricity Regulatory Board
    (ERB), and to restructure Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) to enable a
    Public Private Partnership necessary to mobilize the investment needed for expanding
    generation capacity. The Power Sector Restructuring Task Force will by December 2003
    prepare a specific time-bound action-plan to realize these objectives.
    • Continue to implement the Water Act 2002 by establishing the necessary institutions that
    will facilitate separation of functions of policy formulation, service delivery and regulation
    of the sector. This is critical for improving service delivery and attracting additional
    investment especially from the private sector. The current privatization programme targets
    Nairobi, Mombasa and Coastal region, Nakuru and Kisumu. Nairobi and Mombasa and
    Coastal region are ahead of the others because detailed studies have been done and reports
    are available. The Government now targets to bring on board the other two urban centers,
    namely, Kisumu and Nakuru, as soon as practicable.
    • Consider implementation of the recommendations of the Nairobi Water Options Study. The
    study, which is funded under the Public Private Infrastructure Advisory Facility (PPIAF)
    was intended to determine the best PSP option. The study focused on comparative technical,
    legal and financial feasibility of the four main options for privatization of the water supply
    and sewerage services in Nairobi. The Government will take a decision on the mode of PSP
    by end of September 2003 taking into account the privatization policy.
    • Decide by September 2003 on mode of PSP with respect to Mombasa and Coast Water
    utilities;
    • Implement its decision to concession the management and maintenance of Mombasa-Nairobi
    North Corridor Road to a private operator. The implementation will be effected immediately
    following the World Bank financed Roads Project during fiscal year 2003/04. Preparatory
    work on the concession arrangements has already commenced.
    • Put in place by end-July 2003 containing a time-bound action plan for the privatization of
    Chemelil Sugar Company (CSC). A consultant has already been engaged as advisor of CSC
    privatization and has completed the first phase of the work recommending two strategies,
    notably, (i) equity linked loan facility; and (ii) sale to a strategic investor.
    The Government has prepared a Privatization Bill which will be table in Parliament to provide
    the legal framework for the privatization process. The basis for putting in place the privatization
    legislation is to ensure that public confidence in the process is maintained by ensuring maximum
    transparency. The legislation will require among other conditions competitive bidding, wide
    advance publication of firms to be privatized, clearly publicized privatization criteria, public
    process of opening bids and publication of results. Consequently, the Government will by
    December 2003 develop a clear privatization strategy and program with an implementation plan
    and time table for the remaining list of public enterprises. The strategy will include outright
    privatization, liquidation, mergers, public/private sector partnerships and staff rationalization.
    Key institutions to supervise the process will also be put in place. These include the
    Privatization Commission and the Privatization Tribunal.
    4.5 Regulatory Reforms
    The existing regulatory framework imposes significant costs on business and has been identified
    as a major hindrance to the development of Medium and Small Enterprises (MSEs), and the
    formalization of the informal sector. To ensure that the cost of regulation is minimized, the
    Government will establish a Commission to review all business-related regulations, covering
    15
    both legal and institutional aspects. The findings and recommendations of the Commission will
    be used to formulate a strategy and action plan to address impediments caused by such
    regulations. Where regulations are required, institutional capacity will be developed to ensure a
    level playing field. Among the issues the Commission will address are:
    • Simplification of rules and regulations; and
    • Rationalization of regulations to remove those regulations that may not be necessary
    and creating those that may not be in existence but are required.
    4.6 Competition Law Reforms
    For Kenya to succeed as a market economy and enhance the gains from liberalization, there is
    need to encourage fair competition by enhancing capacity to regulate and manage competition
    policy. The challenges that have undermined the effectiveness of the Monopolies and Prices
    Commission include outdated Restrictive Trade Practices Monopolies and Price Control Act;
    inadequate financial resource allocation to the Commission therefore hampering its
    effectiveness; and lack of harmony between sector regulatory laws and competition law.
    Competition will be improved by enacting and enforcing relevant and appropriate laws
    supportive of competition; harmonizing competition law with sectoral regulatory laws;
    giving the commission more autonomy and making adequate budgetary provisions to build
    the human resource capacity of competition authority to enable it to regulate all sectors of
    the economy. The formulation and implementation of the competition law will take
    cognizance of the special regional and preferential interests of the country.
    4.7 Reforms in Statistical Production and Dissemination
    The government recognizes that good statistics is crucial for evidence based decision making in
    planning and policy formulation. Statistics also play a central role in supporting implementation
    of policies in particular monitoring and evaluation which in turn aids transparency and
    accountability. In the past poor statistics hampered the ability of policy makers to take informed
    decision, undertake meaningful monitoring and evaluation, thus undermined effectiveness of
    projects and the attainment of transparency and accountability.
    One of the administrative reforms to be implemented within the framework of the Recovery
    Programme is the restructuring and strengthening the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) to
    improve governance of statistics and for the Bureau to be able to produce relevant statistics in a
    coordinated and timely fashion. A five year Strategic Plan covering the period 2003/04-2008/09
    has been prepared through a consultative process. The plan sets out the strategic direction for
    the provision of timely official statistics and gives the road map as well as the framework for
    harnessing national and international resources for building sustained statistical capacity in the
    country. It comprehensively outlines the vision, mission, and the strategic objectives. The
    strategic objectives incorporate a detailed work programme, a capacity building programme, and
    proposed new Statistics Act. The proposed Statistics Act aims at elevating the CBS to a status
    of a national statistics agency with a board of directors to set the policy direction and specifies
    the coordination role of CBS in the overall national statistical production in the country.
    A sustainable statistical system will satisfy many demands for data including the Economic
    Recovery for Wealth Creation and Poverty Reduction, the Millennium Development Goals
    (MDGS), New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD) and data requirements for peer
    review process, and other development and poverty reduction efforts by all stakeholders. An
    Integrated Household Based Survey Programme (IHBSP) as opposed to stand alone and narrow
    surveys that satisfied the needs of only a few stakeholders will form the basis of data collection.
    16
    5. INFRASTRUCTURE
    5.1 Introduction
    Physical infrastructure is an important prerequisite in creating and supporting a business
    environment that facilitates private sector investment, growth and job creation. The provision of
    adequate infrastructure and the services thereof, coupled with macroeconomic stability and a
    long-term development strategy, are essential preconditions for sustainable economic and social
    development. Despite the importance of the sector, the past Administration allowed
    infrastructure to deteriorate to the extent that it has become a major hindrance to economic
    development. Kenya is currently characterized by a dilapidated road network, inadequate and
    dilapidated railway network, unreliable supply and costly electricity, poor telecommunications,
    neglect of Information Technolgy, and inadequate and poor quality of water supply systems.
    This sorry state of infrastructure has occurred despite substantial amount of resources committed
    by the Government since independence for the development of the sector. To address the
    problems in the sector, some initiatives have been attempted in the past with the aim of
    increasing its efficiency and competitiveness. These measures include divestiture,
    commercialization of management and operations, privatization, sub-contracting of certain
    services, introduction of competition, tariff liberalization and financial restructuring of some
    parastatals. These reform initiatives were not fully implemented and therefore the sector remains
    wanting in terms of service delivery. Given the importance of this sector which accounts for
    approximately 10 per cent of GDP billion and employed over 183,000 workers in 2002 with
    over Kshs.51.4 billion in wage payments, and its role in facilitating all other productive sectors,
    rehabilitating the sector is of utmost importance.
    Deterioration of physical infrastructure has resulted primarily from inadequate allocation of
    resources for construction, maintenance and rehabilitation of existing facilities, poor contractual
    work, rapid urbanisation, high population growth, and adverse weather conditions. The effects
    of these factors have been compounded by the lack of integrity in procurement of physical
    infrastructure services and the high poverty levels in Kenya. Therefore, the broad strategies to
    address these problems in provision of physical infrastructure services will be geared towards
    creating an environment for facilitating procurement strategies that yield value for money
    expended, curbing wastage, and enhancing performance of infrastructure services.
    In this regard, if the country is to succeed in the increasingly competitive global market, the
    economy must be supported by low-cost high quality infrastructure services that most of her
    competitors already have or are aspiring to get. Therefore, the physical infrastructure sector is an
    important building block in efforts aimed at economic recovery. The broad objectives in this
    sector include supporting the other sectors (productive, social, etc); and facilitating creation of
    employment and poverty reduction.
    The physical infrastructure sector in Kenya has contributed to degradation of the nation’s
    environment through wasteful extractive processes in acquisition of raw materials for
    development of physical facilities, wasteful water applications, poor maintenance of buildings
    and transport networks leading to high levels of emission of greenhouse gases, and application
    of planning systems and procedures that fail to take full cognizance of the impact on the
    environment. Consequently, the other objective of the sector will therefore be to foster adoption
    production techniques and consumption patterns that preserve our environment.
    5.2 Road Transport
    The deterioration of the road network has contributed significantly to the high cost of living and
    doing business in Kenya. Because Kenyans experience the high cost of transport every day,
    improvement of the road network is, in many ways, the “barometer” by which they will measure
    17
    the performance of the Government. The institutional and financing framework for the road
    sector has been reformed significantly in the right direction. This includes the road maintenance
    levy, the establishment of the Kenya Roads Board, and the increased use in the long-term the
    private sector for all road maintenance. A programme for training small construction enterprises
    has been included in the Roads 2000 Programme and the Government is in the process of
    privatizing Axle Load Control and its management. Axle load control system will be reviewed
    regularly in consultation with other member states within COMESA and EAC regional
    framework.
    The use of inappropriate materials has significantly contributed to faster deterioration of the road
    network. To improve the quality of materials used in road construction the Government will take
    the following actions: Update the road design manuals and specifications through enhanced
    research activities on all road making materials; enhance cost effective designs for roads
    and other civil engineering structures; and enhance quality control during construction,
    maintenance and rehabilitation of all works. This will include strengthening the Regional
    Testing Laboratories to cater for all on-going road projects, monitor performance, identify
    potential problems on road pavements and structures and recommend remedial measures
    for urgent attention including monitoring the performance of new road construction
    materials.
    It is estimated that the cost of rehabilitating and reconstructing the road network could be as
    high as US$1 billion. A key challenge is therefore one of financing. A recently completed
    feasibility study shows that there is scope for concessioning of some roads to private investors.
    This is in principle, an attractive proposition, since it would release public resources to focus on
    roads that are not commercially viable. However, it raises the issue of equity (who should pay).
    The choices are charging the specific road users (toll), all road users (a road use levy) or a
    combination of the two. A detailed concessioning proposal including legal considerations is
    being worked for consideration by the Government and stakeholders.
    The Government recognizes that professional incompetence contributes to poor project
    supervision and implementation. The Engineers Registration Board (ERB) is currently updating
    its register to get rid of errant engineers. The process will also create awareness among
    employers of the need to employ competent and qualified engineers recognized by the Institute
    of Engineers in Kenya (IEK) and registered by ERB.
    The broad objective in the roads sector will therefore be to build and maintain durable quality
    “standard” roads with emphasis on safe and efficient transportation. In this effort, the following
    measures are envisaged:
    • Dualing of the Mombasa-Nairobi-Busia/Malaba Highway;
    • Developing of roads under the East African Road Network Project (EARNP);
    • Accelerating the implementation of the Roads 2000 Programme which involves
    development of rural access roads which will help the poor by improving their
    mobility;
    • Taking measures to decongest transport in key urban centres through construction of
    bypasses, that is the Northern and Southern bypasses in Nairobi and the Mombasa
    bypasses; and
    • Reforming the legal, institutional and regulatory framework with a view to enhancing
    the proper design of roads, integrity in road contract procurement, enhancing safety
    and proper and timely maintenance of the road network and allowing for private
    sector participating in the sector.
    18
    5.3 Rail transport
    Kenya Railways, which is the sole rail service provider, is constrained in its ability to contribute
    to the country’s development by operation of aged locomotives, wagons and equipment. Poor
    signaling telephone and telecommunication system negatively affects the utilization of resources
    as locomotives and wagons cannot be turned as fast as desired.
    In 2002, the Corporation completed overhauling 35 locomotives of class 93/94 which has helped
    to improve traffic haulage on the mainline from 1.7 million tonnes in 1997/98 to 2.4 million
    tonnes in 2002/03. Rehabilitation of 12 locomotives of class 67 will start in mid 2003. In order
    to substantially improve capacity beyond the current performance levels, intervention is required
    to assist in meeting the immediate requirements for infrastructure development, maintenance,
    rehabilitation and repair of locomotives, wagons and equipment. The Government strategy for
    addressing these problems will mainly involve:
    • Privatizing Kenya Railways by offering a unitary concession to a private operator;
    • Divesting from Gulf Marine Services on Lake Victoria.
    Revitalization of rail transport services is likely to lead to a substantial diversion of long distance
    freight traffic from road to rail and might help Kenya Railways to regain 50 per cent share of the
    Mombasa-Nairobi traffic and also reduce road damage and carnage, and traffic pollution.
    5.4 Air Transport
    Air transport is the main transport mode for tourists, high-value exports and imports; and
    perishable goods. The service has the potential to facilitate economic growth particularly high
    value agricultural exports. In addition, Kenya occupies a strategic position as an Aviation
    Centre in the Eastern Africa region, serving as the hub for the East, Central and Indian Ocean
    areas and offering transit and refueling facilities for North/South and East/West air traffic.
    In the last ten years both passenger and goods traffic through Kenya’s main airports has
    increased substantially. The number of passenger arrivals increased from 804,600 in 1991 to 1.0
    million in 2002. The growth of passenger traffic would have been much higher were it not for
    the politically instigated tribal clashes in 1997 which adversely affected tourism and the
    economic slowdown in the last decade. Expansion and modernization of the air transport
    capacity is therefore vital to the growth of Kenya’s economy.
    The Government has in the last few years undertaken significant reforms aimed at improving
    capacity and efficiency of the sub-sector. These reforms include liberalization of the domestic
    passenger and cargo market, which was preceded by privatization of Kenya Airways;
    establishment Kenya Civil Aviation Authority in October 2002 in replacement of Directorate of
    Civil Aviation; and establishment of Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) in 1991 to take over the
    functions previously performed by the Aerodromes Department. The Authority is responsible
    for administering, controlling and managing aerodromes; providing and maintaining facilities
    needed for efficient operation of aircrafts; and providing rescue and fire fighting equipment and
    services.
    Despite these reforms, the air services are still not efficient and will need further institutional
    and regulatory reforms in order to meet the objective of handling 2 million tourists and export
    volume growth. To achieve these objectives the Government will:-
    • Upgrade Kisumu, Malindi, Wilson and other tourism airports to be able to
    accommodate the operation of medium range jets;
    • Modernize air traffic management system under Phase I and Global Navigation
    satellite system to provide Navigation guidance without referring to ground based
    facilities. Projects to be undertaken include Phase II of Kenya Air Traffic management
    19
    modernization project and a study to determine the feasibility of establishing a joint
    system of providing Air Navigation services in the East African region upper space;
    • Privatize commercial and non-regulatory services at the airports; and
    • Explore the possibility of private sector participation in building capacity for passenger
    terminal facilities.
    5.5 Maritime and Inland Waterways
    Marine transport offers low cost means of transporting heavy and bulky items. Mombasa port
    administered by the Kenya Ports Authority is the principal seaport in Kenya. The port also
    serves the hinterland countries of Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo,
    Ethiopia, Southern Sudan, Northern-Eastern Tanzania and Somalia. A number of reforms have
    been implemented at the port aimed at improving port services, lowering costs to port users and
    facilitating the movement of cargo especially transit traffic. These measures have mainly
    focused on computerization of key operations. Despite these reforms, the performance of the
    port at 10 million tonnes in 2002, is still far below the total capacity of 22 million tonnes. The
    poor performance of the port is a major cost to the economy in terms of impairing the
    competitiveness of Kenya’s industries and diversion of traffic and hence loss of revenue to other
    ports in the region.
    In order to improve the performance of the port, further reform measures are required. These
    include:
    • Conversion of the port of Mombasa into a land lord port;
    • Conversion of the conventional cargo berths Nos. 11 to 14 into container handling
    facilities to enhance the container handling capacity of the port and enhance the
    performance of rail-mounted gantries to cope with the rise of rail bound containers;
    • Integration of information technology network between Kenya Ports Authority, Kenya
    Revenue Authority, Kenya Railways and other port users in order to facilitate and
    shorten the period of processing documents, from the current 2-4 days to 1 day. The
    intention of this on-going project is to eventually make the port an E-port and
    eliminate/reduce the large number of documentation required. Another advantage of
    the reforms will be reduction in theft and pilferage of goods at the port;
    • Dredging of the port;
    • Construction of a new road access across Kipevu Bridge and explore the potential at
    establishing a free-port in the area;
    • Establishment of a ship open registry and a Maritime Regulatory Authority (MRA) to
    de-link seafaring administration activities from the Kenya Ports Authority’s core
    business;
    • Development of a Maritime Search and Rescue Centre at Mombasa; and
    • Development of cruise ship facilities at the port of Mombasa.
    5.6 Telecommunications
    The communications sector includes telecommunications, postal services, internet services,
    telex, paging and facsimile services. However, it is the telecommunications sector that has
    impacted negatively on the Kenyan economy and will therefore be the main focus for reform.
    Telecommunications services are vital to economic well being of a nation. Inadequate and
    inefficient telecommunications services has contributed to the high cost of doing business in
    20
    Kenya in addition to hindering the introduction of modern services such as data transfer, ecommerce
    and widespread use of credit cards.
    In recognition of the important contribution of telephony to the country, the Kenya Government
    has initiated institutional reforms, which led to the splitting of the Kenya Posts and
    Telecommunications Corporation into Communications Commission of Kenya (CCK)- a
    regulatory body, Postal Corporation of Kenya (PCK) and Telkom Kenya Limited (TKL).
    However, the sector faces the problem of deterioration in fixed line services and low teledensity
    of one fixed line per 100 people. There is also wide disparity between urban and rural areas with
    urban teledensity of 4 lines per 100 compared with 0.16 lines per 100 persons in the rural areas.
    The broad objective of the sector is to create a seamless, efficient and cost-effective
    telecommunications service for business and social interactions. It is hoped that through various
    measures outlined below teledensity will rise from the current unsatisfactory level to 4 lines per
    100 persons in the rural areas and 20 lines per 100 persons in the urban centres. To achieve these
    objectives, the Government will put in place the following measures:
    • Restructure Telkom Kenya to improve its performance in preparation for eventual
    privatization which is planned to be completed by June 2005.
    • License a second national fixed line operator by end of fiscal year 2004/2005 and a
    third mobile operator by December 2003 to increase competition with the aim of
    increasing the quality and efficiency in service provision and eventually lowering the
    costs;
    • License by the end of 2003, a third mobile operator and four other internet gateway
    service providers in line with the Government’s commitment to enhance competition in
    the telecommunications sector; and
    • Fully liberalize the use of VSAT services during the 2003/04 fiscal year.
    5.7 Energy
    The three main sources of energy supply in Kenya are electricity, wood fuel petroleum and
    renewable energy. Energy plays a critical role in the development of the country. The current
    energy policy objectives emphasize the need for its availability and accessibility at cost-effective
    prices, and in support of sustainable socio-economic development while protecting and
    conserving the environment. In appropriating these sources of energy as tools in the
    development agenda, the Government intends to formulate a comprehensive energy
    development policy and reform programme embracing all sources of energy, especially
    renewable ones aimed at fulfilling the energy policy objectives.
    Electricity
    Provision of inexpensive and reliable supply of electricity is the lifeblood of any modern
    economy. Kenya’s electricity supplies are unreliable and expensive. This has arisen for a variety
    of reasons, including ineffective management of power purchase agreements leading to
    extremely high tariffs of privately generated power, inequitable distribution of operating costs,
    weak and inefficient utility management, a bloated work force in the Kenya Power and Lighting
    Company Ltd, past politicization of sector management, wasteful and cost ineffective
    procurement, failure to invest in system reinforcement and poor maintenance of power
    distribution infrastructure, lack of commitment to reforms and integrity and governance related
    problems.
    The objective of the power sector is to ensure a reliable supply of electricity at competitive
    tariffs. In this connection, a number of reforms have been carried out in the power sector since
    1994, which included review of tariffs, retrenchment in the key power utility institutions,
    21
    liberalization of power generation in 1995 and separation of power distribution from generation
    and regulatory services. Despite these reforms, the quality of electricity services has not
    improved as evidenced by the frequent unplanned power outages. To correct this undesirable
    situation, the following measures will be put in place:
    • Enhance collection of receivables to reduce working capital costs and increase
    connectivity to increase capacity utilization;
    • Create a specific statutory body to implement the rural electrification programme with
    the aim of enhancing connectivity to at least 40 percent.
    • Develop and implement a programme to reduce the current level of system losses from
    about 21 per cent to 15 per cent. As the reduction of non-technical losses (largely
    power thefts) needs little financial outlay, priority will be accorded to this activity
    whose benefits are immediate and estimated at about Kshs.200 million for each
    percentage point drop;
    • Target investment in improvements of the transmission and distribution system
    reinforcements starting with those areas with highest returns;
    • Amend the Electric Power Act to facilitate competition at all levels of generation and
    supply and distribution in 2003/04 financial year;
    • Strengthen institutional capacity of ERB, KPLC and KENGEN in order to improve
    their operational and financial performance;
    • Accelerate Geothermal Resource Assessment(GRA) to facilitate economic merit order
    ranking of geothermal energy as a least cost source of electricity supply;
    • Enhance availability, accessibility and sustainability of electric power supply at cost
    effective tariffs through: diversifying power supply sources by accessing South African
    pool and enhancing imports from Uganda; and implement power projects identified
    under the least cost power development plan. In addition, Sondu-Miriu power project
    will be completed and deliberate efforts made to extend electricity services to rural
    areas and targeted urban areas to increase accessibility to both the rural population
    and the urban poor.
    Petroleum fuels
    The main problem affecting this sector is the high cost of petroleum products due to inefficiency
    of the Kenya Petroleum Refineries Limited (KPRL), which is passed on to consumers. To
    address this problem, the following will be implemented:
    • An independent study to establish the economic viability of the continued operation of
    KPRL relative to imports of petroleum products will be completed by December 2003
    and its findings will help the Government to make a decision on the future of KPRL;
    • A study to standardize LPG cylinders, gas regulators and valves to allow flexibility of
    usage is at an advanced stage of completion. The study’s recommendations on an
    appropriate legal and regulatory framework to enforce standardization of cylinder
    valves and regulators will be incorporated in the Petroleum bill expected to be tabled
    before Parliament by September 2003;
    • Construction of LPG import handling and storage facilities at Mombasa and of bulk
    storage facilities in Nairobi;
    • Acceleration of the pace of prospecting for fossil fuels;
    22
    • Enhancement of the share of new and renewable energy in Kenya’s energy supply
    matrix; and
    • The Government will publish a Petroleum bill whose aim will be to regulate the Sector
    and protect the consumer from adulteration, dumping and misuse of monopoly power.
    Pipeline transport
    Pipeline transport is crucial to the economy in facilitating the speedy and safe delivery of
    petroleum supplies to the hinterland. In this regard, the petroleum pipeline will be extended to
    Kampala during the Plan period.
    23
    6. PRODUCTIVE SECTORS
    6.1 Introduction
    The productive sectors in the context of the Economic Recovery Strategy are agriculture,
    tourism, trade and industry. These sectors account for approximately 50 per cent of GDP,
    provide 628,000 formal sector jobs and 3.7 million SME sector jobs while agriculture alone
    provides 62 per cent of overall employment. Hence, the productive sector is very important for
    economic recovery and employment creation. It is thus the core of the NARC Government’s
    economic recovery strategy.
    6.2 Agriculture and Fishing
    Agriculture
    Over the last decade, the agricultural sector with exception of horticulture, experienced low and
    declining productivity in terms of export earnings, employment creation, food security and
    household farm incomes. Thus from a real growth rate of 4.4 per cent in 1996, it decelerated to
    1.5 per cent in 1999 and to a negative` 2.4 per cent in 2000. In 2002, the performance remained
    weak with a growth of 0.7 per cent. The country’s traditional exports: coffee and tea face
    declining real world prices coupled with low value addition that has led to low returns. This
    scenario in agriculture portends a critical challenge to the country’s economic recovery. Reasons
    for the decline in agricultural productivity include:
    • Poor governance in key agricultural institutions, particularly the cooperative sector
    and lack of a comprehensive legal framework to guide formulation of consistent
    policies;
    • Institutional failure due to lack of capacity by the private sector to take over functions
    previously performed by the state after liberalisation; and lack of markets and weak
    marketing systems;
    • Poor access to farm credit, high cost of farm inputs, insecurity in certain parts of the
    country, and taxation of farmers through local authority cess and other levies;
    • High prevalence of HIV/AIDS affecting agricultural productivity;
    • Low level of public funding and inefficient use of public resources resulting in
    inadequate and inefficient infrastructure which has led to high cost of production;
    and
    • Inappropriate technology that is unresponsive to variations in agro-ecological zones;
    and inadequate funding for research and extension services.
    In an effort to reverse the declining agricultural performance, initiatives have been put in place
    to revitalize the sector. Some of the strategies the Government is implementing for the
    development of the agricultural sector include both legislative and institutional reforms. Key
    initiatives include enactment of the Tea Act, Sugar Act, Coffee Act and a review of the Cotton
    Act and the Co-operative Societies Act. Despite these measures, the problem of low productivity
    still persists. In this connection, further measures will need to be taken if the envisaged growth
    and employment objectives are to be achieved.
    The planned interventions, which are contained in the Kenya Rural Development Strategy,
    include:
    • Legal and institutional reforms: To consolidate during the recovery period the over 60
    Statutes governing the agricultural sector into a single legislation. The objective of the
    24
    legislation will be to ensure safety and health, promote self-governance, and encourage
    efficiency and competition;
    • Research and Extension Services: The Government will put in place a new agricultural
    extension policy to promote collaboration with other extension services providers, enhance
    cooperative extension services, establish a database for extension planning and performance
    monitoring, and provide farmers with demand-driven extension services. Since effective
    extension services ensure that outputs of R&D effort are transmitted to farmers, reforms in
    the short term will be geared towards extension services. Further reforms will entail
    consolidation of public sector agricultural research institutions into a single institution by
    merging the smaller research units with the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI).
    The benefit will be administrative efficiency;
    • Access to Credit: To raise the productivity of farmers, access to affordable credit (in terms
    of collateral and repayment terms) is critical. The Government through the Financial Sector
    Assessment Program (FSAP) will review the institutional framework with a view to
    encouraging development of institutions that are well placed to provide credit to agriculture.
    This will include development of micro-finance institutions (MFIs) and the revival of the
    Agricultural Finance Corporation (AFC);
    • Irrigation Development: The Government will rehabilitate irrigation schemes in the
    country to increase production of crops such as cotton and rice. It will also finalize the
    review of the Irrigation Act to reflect the socio-economic changes in the sub-sector and to
    facilitate greater participation of farmer’s in irrigation development;
    • Diversification of Enterprises and Crop Uses: The Government will encourage
    diversification through production and use of non-traditional crops such as cashew nuts,
    bixa, oil crops, sorghum, arrowroots, cassava and sweet potatoes. Research and extension
    services targeted towards the non-traditional crops in the country will be supported to boost
    their production and consumption;
    • Pyrethrum: The Government will remove constraints in this sub-sector by liberalizing the
    domestic market for pyrethrum;
    • Co-operative Development: Most agricultural crops are produced and marketed under cooperative
    societies. However, the movement has been bedeviled by governance related
    problems. Farmers based institutions and associations will be strengthened inn order to
    reduce cost of inputs and improve access to markets. In this connection, a Task Force has
    already been established to review the Co-operative Societies Act of 1997 and the
    Government will implement the recommendations of the Task Force;
    • Value Addition: In order to improve value addition of textile exports in AGOA the
    Government will rehabilitate the Bura and Hola Irrigation schemes; and
    • Guaranteed Minimum Return (GMR): modalities for establishing an effective and
    sustainable GMR facility for strategic crops will be developed.
    Livestock development
    The livestock industry comprises mainly of dairy, meat production and hides and skins from
    cows, sheep, goats and poultry. Apart from its relevance as a direct source of food, it also
    accounts for about 7 percent of GDP. The sector is also dominated by small-scale producers. For
    instance about 80 percent of the milk consumed in the domestic market is produced by smallscale
    producers and marketed through informal channels. Hence the performance of the industry
    has significant impact on employment and poverty levels. However the performance of the
    25
    industry in the last few years has been handicapped by the collapse of supportive infrastructure
    and legal impediments. In order therefore to improve the performance of the industry, the
    Government will undertake the following measures:
    • Develop a clear policy on milk production, processing, and marketing emphasizing on
    health and safety standards;
    • Promoting animal health by reactivating and expanding dipping, breeding and
    clinical services including monitoring and control of animal diseases. In this regard,
    the Government will consider allowing the stocking of animal drugs by animal health
    technicians;
    • Promoting dairy goats as an emerging source of milk and other small stock activities
    such as poultry and bee-keeping;
    • Supporting the development of facilities for milk handling such as collection and
    cooling centers;
    • Encouraging the private sector and local authorities to establish small abattoirs and
    meat processing facilities; and
    • Encourage establishment of value adding processes.
    Fishing
    The fishing industry’s contribution to local incomes, subsistence and nutrition is extremely
    important as most of this contribution occurs in areas that have the highest incidence of poverty
    in the country (Nyanza and Coast provinces). The sector has the potential to contribute
    significantly to employment and export earnings. Exports of fish products earn Kenya Kshs. 4
    billion annually. The industry is however unable to realize its full potential due among other
    factors a stagnant aquaculture sub-sector, over-reliance on capture fisheries, environmental
    degradation, and an uncertain export market. Due to these and other bottlenecks, the industry is
    projected to grow by only 0.8% per year between 2002 and 2007. To remove these bottlenecks
    and exploit the potential in the fishing industry, the Government will:
    • Develop facilitative infrastructure which include landing breaches, cooling plants and access
    roads to reduce wastage and to achieve the required sanitary and health standards;
    • Promote aquaculture to improve food security, nutritional status and incomes.
    • Enter into agreements to promote closer regional cooperation in the management and
    regulation of the trans-boundary fishery resources including control of water hyacinth;
    • Encourage growth of micro-finance institutions to provide credit.
    6.3 Tourism
    The tourism sector in Kenya continues to play an important role in the country's economic
    development in terms of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) contribution, foreign exchange
    earnings and employment. The sector significantly contributes to national income, foreign
    exchange earnings and employment. Due to its high multiplier effects, the sector acts as stimuli
    to the growth of other sectors that include transport entertainment, agriculture, trade and
    industry. However the performance of the sector is currently experiencing challenges in terms of
    escalation of global terrorism, infrastructural deficiencies, static and un innovative products,
    meagre resources allocated for promotion and marketing, declining standards of tourism
    products, increased regional competition.
    26
    The government will therefore pursue various strategies to revamp the sector. In this connection the
    government is committed to do the following:
    • Re-launching Kenya as global tourism destination. Currently the sector is faced with serious
    challenges in terms of image. Due to recent global terrorism threats, the country is increasingly
    being perceived as insecure. The government will provide more resources towards promotion
    and marketing in our source markets;
    • Diversifying and improving tourism products, circuits and source markets while ensuring
    sustainability. Kenya has been over dependent on the beach and safari tourism products.
    Diversification will be done through opening up of new tourists circuits, promotion of new
    products like conference tourism, sports tourism, retirement tourism, eco-tourism. Participation
    in international and regional travel fairs and exhibitions will be enhanced as well as opening up
    new tourism offices and re-establishment of National Tourist Office in key source markets;
    • Upgrading of the Tourist Police Unit. The Unit currently operating at the Coast will be
    upgraded and its operations expanded to other regions of the country with high tourism
    potential. The officers will trained and equipped to make them more effective;
    • Ensure maintenance of standards. To maintain tourism product standards the government
    will regularly classify all tourists establishment, carry out regular inspections and improve
    regulation of the sector through licensing;
    • Hotels and other accommodation facilities refurbishment. The government has been
    assisting hotels through duty and VAT exemptions for hotel refurbishing equipment. This
    programme will be intensified and alternative measures like mobilisation of short term and long
    term soft loan from International Development Finance institutions will be pursued;
    • Involvement of Local Communities in Tourism Development. The government will ensure
    that local tourism operators are facilitated through availing accessible and affordable credit
    through Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC)/Catering Training Levy and
    Development Trustee (CTLDT) and Tourism Trust Fund (TTF). The operators will also be
    assisted through the refresher courses on business management at Kenya Utalii College (KUC).
    On marketing, Kenya Tourism Board (KTB) will ensure production of promotional materials
    for the small operators, which it will use to market their products. Local communities' tourism
    projects and Small and Micro-Enterprises in tourism will be facilitated to forge partnerships and
    linkages with the dominant tour operators;
    • Provision of Skilled Manpower. The Government will undertake the following: Upgrading of
    KUC to offer degree programmes; Establishment of regulatory framework for standardisation
    of training for the sector through CTDLT; Refurbishment of KUC’s training facilities; establish
    a tourism training college at the Coast;
    • Provision of Incentives. There will continuously review taxation measures that adversely
    affect the sector with an aim of providing incentives to the private sector;
    • Promotion of domestic tourism. The government’s strategy in this respect involves
    promotion of domestic tourism through participation in various local and regional trade
    shows; publicity through advertisements in the print and electronic media; hosting of public
    workshops to sensitize the general public on the importance of tourism to the national
    economy and encouraging Kenyans to tour their country;
    • Development of a Tourism Policy, Tourism Development Plan, Legislation and
    Regulatory Framework. The government together with all tourism stakeholders has embarked
    on formulation of a tourism policy framework and a tourism development plan. Legislation and
    regulatory framework affecting private sector operations in the sector will be reviewed with a
    view to providing a conducive environment for the sector operators; and
    • Creation of a Tourism Information System. Currently a feasibility study of establishing a
    Tourism Satellite Account has been conducted. The next phase of the Tourism Satellite
    27
    Account will be undertaking three studies inbound and outbound tourism expenditures and
    household expenditure surveys.
    6.4 Trade and Industry
    This sector accounts for over 20.0 per cent of GDP and employ about 300,000 people in the
    formal sector and 3.7 million in the informal. In addition, the sector accounted for over 43 per
    cent of Kenya’s total export earnings in 2002. Exports of manufactured goods accounted for
    over 33 per cent of merchandise exports earnings. The trade and industry sector is strategic to
    economic recovery because it is the sector likely to recover fastest.
    A number of constraints limit the realization of the full potential of the sector. These factors
    include low morale occasioned by poor governance, poor infrastructure, high business
    transactions costs, insecurity unfair competition from counterfeit import goods and problems of
    access to external markets. Various measures have been put in place to address the challenges
    facing the sector. These include incentive schemes for the manufacturing sector such as
    duty/VAT exemptions or remissions on imported inputs and the Export Processing Zones
    (EPZs); the Secretariat on Counterfeit Control, and Commercial Courts; strengthening of
    surveillance on transit imports to avoid diversion; active participation in regional and
    international integration and cooperation schemes such as EAC, COMESA, and ACP-EU; the
    application of safeguard measures under the COMESA agreement to protect the sugar and wheat
    industry and improving market access abroad particularly in Africa and European Union.
    The micro and small enterprises which covers a range of establishments employing one to 50
    persons is an important component of tourism, trade and industry sector. A 1999 survey of
    MSEs indicated that these enterprises are faced with many constraints. The most serious
    constraints identified are: lack of adequate market (34 per cent) for their products; access to
    affordable credit; insecurity and harassment by local authorities; and dearth of serviced
    commercial worksites. The study findings suggest that policy and programme attention or
    priority should increasingly be targeted towards rural-based enterprises, which account for 65.6
    per cent of total micro and small-scale enterprises. One important spin-off of focusing policy
    interaction on the rural based MSEs is the advantage of stabilizing migration and hence reducing
    stress on urban environment and infrastructure. The other area of policy focus that needs urgent
    attention is establishment of a conducive environment for growth of MSEs to medium
    enterprises that have capacity to produce high quality products and to create quality
    employment. Given the significant contribution of MSEs to the national GDP and employment,
    estimated at 18 per cent and 72 per cent respectively, special priority will be accorded to this
    sector in order to enhance its role in generating growth, creating jobs and in reducing poverty.
    As indicated earlier, the Government has been taking measures to improve security and
    infrastructure, which will benefit all sectors of the economy. The Government will undertake the
    following further measures:
    • Improve the investment environment by putting in place an Investment Code that
    consolidates into one Act all incentives, property rights’ protection and institutional
    arrangements in order to reduce the red tape and cost of bureaucracy. The Code will
    provide for the creation of a one-stop Investment Authority;
    • Computerize the entire system of investment-related offices including the immigration,
    customs, security vetting services, lands office, and registrar of companies (among
    others) to ensure that investors and the Investment Authority have real time access to
    relevant data and information;
    28
    • Expand and strengthen partnership with the private sector especially in negotiating
    trade protocols and other business related issues;
    • Identify suitable zones (through Local Authorities) with basic infrastructure which will
    serve as incubators for SMEs. This will also improve their image, visibility and
    facilitate linkage between SMEs and medium and large scale enterprises;
    • Promote existence of peace and harmony in the industry in order to encourage new
    investments and raise productivity and employment creation opportunities. This will be
    achieved by reviewing the industrial and labour relations framework to provide for a
    proactive and efficient dispute settlement mechanisms. This will in particular focus on
    reviewing the wage guidelines to ensure that the wage setting mechanisms take account
    of the need to retain international competitiveness.
    • Develop an export development strategy that considers all sectors (goods and services)
    of export potential and review the existing export development incentives’ schemes
    (such as EPZs and MUBs). The strategy will also focus on the measures required to
    ensure diversification of export markets and reduce vulnerability to unilateral
    decisions over trade in the export markets;
    • Review the Sessional Paper No.2 of 1997 on Industrial Transformation to the Year
    2020 as a pre-requisite for preparing a comprehensive Industrial Master Plan by the
    end of 2004. The Plan will identify the institutional, infrastructural, human resource
    and incentive regimes necessary to promote industrialization and will be primarily
    focused on enhancing Kenya’s labour intensive export-oriented industries. The Plan
    will incorporate measures proposed in the Sessional Paper on the development of
    MSEs;
    • Complete the Sessional Paper on micro and small enterprises (MSEs) with a focus on
    employment creation and poverty reduction.
    • Benchmark key industries to international competitors and structure recovery efforts
    for these industries around the established international benchmark prices. The focus
    will be on resource-based industries to maximize the benefits to the rural areas;
    • Focus on garments or clothing manufacturing to take advantage of the AGOA market.
    This market provides an opportunity for development of long-term clothing supply
    capacity with high potential for rapid employment creation, foreign investment, export
    earnings, and transformation of the MSE sector through linkages with external
    markets;
    • Build capacity to monitor international trade malpractices in order to effectively apply
    anti-dumping and countervailing measures so as to ensure that Kenyan products are
    not unfairly driven out of markets; and
    • Enhance support for R&D for industries by reviewing the tax incentives for doing
    research and zero-rating research-related equipment.
    6.5 Information, Broadcasting and Film
    Information, broadcasting and film sub-sectors are key sectors in the economy. Improvements in
    information technology have become a precondition for economic survival all over the world.
    Further, the right to information is a fundamental human right. The huge potential in the film
    sub-sector offers Kenya an excellent opportunity to market its tourism.
    To improve the media, broadcasting and film sub-sector the government will do the following:-
    29
    • Creation of a Film Commission of Kenya and promotion of the film industry. To fully
    exploit the large potential the government will create a Kenya Film Commission as a joint
    stakeholder institution with the mandate to market and popularize Kenya as a filmmaking
    destination and facilitate filmmakers with the licensing and logistical support here on the
    ground. Deliberate efforts will be put in place to step up the marketing of Kenya as a film
    destination of choice by enhancing:-Participation in TV/Film markets and festivals;
    production of promotional materials and establishment of an interactive web-site.
    • Development of a comprehensive film policy. These will facilitate sustainable exploitation
    of the sub-sector that ensure maximisation of benefits accruing to the country.
    • Ensure full liberalisation of the airwaves in media and broadcasting. Licenses for
    electronic and media services will be issued on the ability and integrity of the applicant.
    • Review policy on vernacular services to ensure the service full exploits the existing
    potential in community broadcasting. The KBC transmitter will form a backbone for signal
    distribution, as is the case in South Africa and United Kingdom.
    • Improve the legal framework in the media and broadcasting sectors. This will ensure
    continuos access to quality information and that the investors in this sector have a
    conducive environment to carry out their business.
    • Prepare a programme of standardised information training and education to ensure
    maintenance of high standards in the media and broadcasting sectors.
    6.6 Forestry and Mining
    Forestry and mining are important not only because of the direct consumable products such as
    timber, but also because of the impact that their exploitation has on the environment and
    productivity of other sectors. In particular, agricultural productivity is significantly dependent on
    forests and a healthy environment. Although mining has not featured highly in the economic
    agenda, the combined output of various industrial materials is significant.
    The forestry and mining sector is faced with many constraints, which hamper its development.
    These constraints include inadequate policy, legal and institutional framework governing natural
    resources exploitation. There is inadequate community participation in management of the
    environment and natural resources. Besides, there is insufficient information on natural
    resources inventory. The forestry in particular has been seriously affected by weak governance,
    which has led to unprecedented destruction of forests with serious environmental consequences.
    This has been exacerbated by lack of cheaper alternative sources of energy. Inappropriate
    policies on alternative fuels like Kerosene have resulted in deforestation.
    In order to overcome the constraints noted above and encourage new investments and
    competition in the sector, the Government is already implementing measures aimed at
    accelerating the expansion of forest cover and repossession of forestland that had been
    irregularly allocated to private developers. Other measures that are contemplated include:
    • Develop a clear policy in order to eliminate corruption regarding harvesting of forest
    products and allocation of forest land for private development;
    • Promote development of agro-forestry and encourage community participation in
    efficient management of forests. This will be complemented with continued re-
    30
    afforestation including private sector participation to ensure the attainment of the
    minimum required forest coverage of 10 per cent by the end of 2007; and
    • Develop a mining policy to guide decisions on project proposals, compensation for
    people displaced by mining projects, environment protection, technology transfer
    requirements, and determination of efficient royalties to cover the costs of mining.
    31
    7. EQUITY AND SOCIAL-ECONOMIC AGENDA
    7.1 Introduction
    The broad objectives of the social sector is to reduce poverty and narrow inequality through
    employment, empowerment and improving access, affordability and quality of social services.
    Rapid economic growth or the baking of a bigger national cake, is the only assured way of
    reducing poverty and enhancing gainful employment opportunities in Kenya in the long run.
    However, in the medium term, interventions that increase access to social services and reduce
    inequality can improve the situation of the poor even before the impacts of rapid economic
    growth begin to be felt. Furthermore, there are segments of society who, due to their
    vulnerability, marginalization or lack of skills will be unable to benefit from improving socioeconomic
    conditions. The focus of this chapter is to address the issues relating to the poor,
    marginalized and vulnerable groups, which, even in a 3-year recovery period, cannot be allowed
    to await general economic improvement but must be tackled as part of a wider socio-economic
    agenda.
    As indicated in Chapter 1, Kenya has high levels of inequality: the poor are disproportionately
    less educated and less skilled than the non-poor. In addition, the poor are more likely to be
    unable to access social services such as treated water, adequate sanitation, medical services and
    other social services. Furthermore, employment opportunities of the poor are highly constrained.
    Finally there is a wide range of characteristics that define the poor ranging from landlessness,
    reliance on subsistence farming and large household sizes among others. The key interventions
    envisaged include policies for education, health and nutrition, HIV/AIDS, labour and social
    security.
    7.2 Education
    Education is a key determinant of earnings and therefore an important exit route from poverty.
    Education improves people’s ability to take advantage of the opportunities that can improve
    their well-being as individuals and be able to participate more effectively in the community and
    markets. Higher educational attainment for a household head significantly reduces the likelihood
    of a household being poor. Likewise, the education level of mothers significantly affects the
    health status of the entire family.
    The broad objectives of education sector interventions are to achieve 100 per cent net primary
    school enrolment rate and reduce the disparity in access and quality of education. Secondary
    objectives are to improve access and quality and to reduce disparities at all levels of education.
    In meeting these objectives several challenges will be faced by the sector. The first challenge is
    direct costs of schooling, which have kept a significant proportion of the poor away from school.
    According to the 1997 Welfare, Monitoring and Evaluation Survey(WMES), 30.7 per cent of the
    poor children who were out of school were unable to attend due to affordability. This nonattendance
    has led to declining enrolment rates. The second challenge is the low levels of
    internal efficiency as evidenced by high drop out rate (5-6 per cent annually) and repetition rates
    (15-16per cent annually) at primary levels and low transition rates. Finally is the regional and
    gender disparities with the ASAL areas being particularly hard hit.
    In order to meet these challenges, the Government has introduced free primary education and
    substantially revised the curricula to reduce the financial burden of education. Further measures
    will however be required to ensure attainment of these objectives. These measures include:
    32
    • Optimal staffing (student teacher ratios of 40:1), increasing availability of textbooks to
    achieve a pupil text book ratio of 3:1 in the early grades and 2:1 in the higher grades,
    and sensitization of communities on the benefits of education;
    • Conducting in service training for teachers annually;
    • Increasing the bursary programme to cover at least 10 per cent of enrolled students,
    with emphasis on ASAL areas and other vulnerable groups, paying particular attention
    to girls;
    • Reviewing the education curriculum to make it relevant to the changing socio-economic
    environment so that the students can more easily fit in the labour market.
    7.3 Health
    The health situation of Kenyans improved progressively after independence up to 1990 but has
    thereafter been deteriorating. The achievement of good health is critical in enhancing human
    development. Improving health conditions reduces production losses caused by worker illness,
    increases the enrolment of children in school and increases learning ability. Thus, the human
    capital of the poor is improved by increasing their access to basic healthcare and nutrition. An
    important aspect of the recovery programme must therefore ensure that the fundamental
    concerns of equity, access, affordability and quality in the provision of basic health services are
    met.
    Socio-economic analysis of the poverty dimensions reveals that the main health challenge facing
    the poor is affordability. The Second Report on Poverty in Kenya revealed that 40 per cent of
    the poor (39.5 per cent of the urban poor and 43.8per cent of the rural poor) did not seek
    medical care when they were sick due to inability to cover the cost of medical care compared to
    only 2.5 per cent who were constrained by distance to a health facility. Hence issues to do with
    affordability will be critical to improving the well being of the poor. Against this background
    the main objectives of the health care during the next three years will be to improve affordability
    and coverage of quality health services particularly for the poor.
    Although the Government has been allocating substantial budgetary resources to health sector,
    the general health of Kenyans continues to deteriorate for various reasons including: emergence
    of new diseases such as HIV/AIDS, misuse of resources due to corruption and emigration of
    health workers from Kenya largely due to low remuneration. In this connection, the
    Government will take corrective measures to meet the objectives of the health sector as
    indicated above. These measures include among others.
    • Enactment of legislation converting the NHIF into a National Social Health Insurance
    Fund (NSHIF) which will cover both in patient and out patient medical needs sharing
    of costs between the Exchequer, the employers and employees, informal sector and
    other productive segments of society;
    • As part of the NSHIF implementation process, the Government will set up special
    healthcare endowment fund to target vulnerable groups, for instance the aged, disabled
    and other deserving persons;
    • Rehabilitate existing health facilities; and
    • Overhaul the system of procurement and distribution of drugs for public health
    facilities in order to reduce cost of drugs and make them affordable and also to
    rationalize the distribution system to ensure that drugs are supplied to areas where
    most needed. In this context, the Kenya Medical Supplies Agency (KEMSA) will be
    operationalised as a least cost non-profit provider of drugs and medical inputs.
    33
    7.4 Labour and Industrial Relations
    The labour force is a major contributor to output growth in all societies. In Kenya, however,
    there is a massive under-utilization of this productive asset. There are about 2 million
    unemployed persons, mostly young and with no skills. The high level of unemployment has a
    direct impact on poverty levels and social problems such as crime and insecurity. A second
    dimension of the labour force problems is the productivity issue. Low labour force productivity
    is primarily a result of low education and skills. Labour productivity is also affected by the
    status of industrial relations and conditions at work places. The key objectives of the labour
    policy are therefore to promote acquisition of skills, harmonious industrial relations and ensure
    healthy working conditions for workers. In order to achieve these objectives, the Government
    will:
    • Put in place measures to expedite settlement and arbitration of trade disputes to
    promote industrial harmony;
    • Enforce the laws aimed at promoting health and safety standards and protecting
    workers from occupational hazards by implementing surveillance and hygiene audits
    at work places;
    • Strengthen the recently established National Productivity Centre with a view to
    institutionalizing a productivity measurement process and internalizing the same in
    labour policy formulation process especially as relates to wage setting; and
    • Improve Labour-Employers-Government interaction and policy understanding
    through the National Economic and Social Council.
    7.5 National Social Security Fund (NSSF)
    Social security or social protection is needed to improve resource allocation in an economy. The
    provision for old age, disability, accidents and sickness, as well as safety nets and social
    assistance programmes are designed to ameliorate the impact of adverse shocks particularly on
    the poor. Social protection is an economic as well as a social imperative. Following a shock,
    social security programmes help prevent or at least mitigate what could be irreversible damage
    to accumulation of human capital such as child labour, malnutrition or dropping out of school.
    Kenya’s social security system is dominated by the NHIF and the NSSF. The NSSF covers only
    workers in the formal sector and has been adversely affected by poor investment decisions.
    Since the NSSF excludes informal workers, over 70 per cent of total employment is excluded
    from public social security. Employers in the informal sector do not contribute to social
    insurance schemes. Those who are self-employed often lack sufficient income to contribute to
    social insurance schemes. However, if appropriate legal and institutional frameworks were put
    in place, the system would be affordable to a wider spectrum of people.
    In order to improve the situation in social security, the Government will:
    • Review the NSSF Act to provide for conversion of NSSF from a provident fund to a
    pension scheme and expand coverage to provide for the requirements of the people in
    the informal and other sectors;
    • Explore flexible contributions to allow more contributors to the social security scheme
    and non-contributory schemes such as social assistance programmes to assist the poor
    and vulnerable groups; and
    34
    • Explore the possibility of the social security funds lending money to employees and
    employers for developmental purposes and especially for housing projects for their
    workers.
    7.6 Shelter and Housing
    Shelter and housing are basic needs for human survival and are important for the advancement
    of well-being. Shelter is a social as well as an economic good. As a social good, it provides
    dignity, privacy and security to individual, family and community. As an economic good, it
    provides capital formation, employment creation, improvement of health, and increasing labour
    productivity.
    In Kenya, the fundamental issue is the high cost of decent housing, which the majority of the
    population cannot afford. This high cost is due to the high cost of land, construction and
    building materials. As a result, less than 21 per cent of all housing and 48 per cent of urban
    housing had durable walls; only 10 per cent of all housing and 43 per cent of urban housing had
    access to electricity; 19 per cent of all housing and 56 per cent of urban housing had access to
    piped water; and 17 per cent of the population had no access to sanitary facilities whatsoever,
    while over 43 per cent of houses were overcrowded.
    The core aim of Government policy is to facilitate the construction of 150,000 housing units
    annually during the period covered by this Recovery Programme to meet the growing demand
    for housing. The Government will enact appropriate land and housing legislation to facilitate
    private sector development of affordable houses. In addition, the Government will explore the
    possibility of working with development partners to develop a framework for upgrading slums
    and informal settlements in the urban areas.
    7.7 HIV/AIDS
    The HIV/AIDS pandemic deserves special consideration given that it impacts negatively on all
    sectors of the economy. The pandemic is the single-most serious health and development
    challenge that Kenya has faced in its post-independence history. It is the only health problem
    that is believed to have reversed the significant gains made in life expectancy and infant
    mortality during the first three decades of independence. The pandemic is becoming much more
    than a health problem because it encompasses economic, social, and cultural dimensions. The
    epidemic continues to exert pressure on the healthcare delivery systems yet prospects for finding
    a cure for it remain elusive.
    The Government recognizes the devastating effect that HIV/AIDS is having on children and
    those who care for them. To spearhead the battle against this pandemic, the Government
    considers it prudent to deal with it at highest level. In this context, a Cabinet sub-committee on
    HIV/AIDS chaired by the President was established at the beginning of 2003. The country will
    deal with HIV/AIDS pandemic by developing a comprehensive HIV/AIDS research and control
    programme. The multi-sectoral approach to HIV/AIDS will be continued and the institutional
    framework to implement it will be strengthened in partnership with major stakeholders. This
    will entail taking the following additional measures.
    • Setting up a special healthcare programmes for HIV/AIDS infected people;
    • Training communities on HIV/AIDS home-based care;
    • Implementing HIV/AIDS curriculum in all schools;
    • Strengthening the health sector response to HIV/AIDS by forming Aids Control
    committee at constituency level.
    35
    7.8 Food and Nutrition
    Despite tremendous improvement in nutritional status of Kenyans since independence, a
    significant proportion of people, particularly children still live under continuous threat of hunger
    and starvation. Malnutrition in children is particularly common in certain areas or certain times
    of the year due to due to poverty and disruptions in food supply systems among other factors.
    Chronic under-nutrition is the most common form of malnutrition and is associated with
    insufficient dietary intake. The achievement of food security and good nutritional status is
    critical in enhancing human development and overall productivity of Kenya. A key objective of
    the Recovery Programme is therefore to ensure food security in order to reduce the incidence of
    malnutrition. In this regard, the Government proposes to eliminate vitamin A deficiency in
    under 5- year olds by 2005; start awareness campaigns on the benefits of improved
    nutrition; and promote production and consumption of nutritious food.
    36
    8 ARID AND SEMI-ARID LANDS
    8.1 Introduction
    Kenya’s arid and semi arid areas, which cover about 80 per cent of Kenya’s total land surface
    and 25 per cent of the human population, are unique in nature and require special attention to
    strengthen not only the economic base of the inhabitants but also the economy as a whole. Since
    independence, the economic potential of the arid and semi-arid lands (ASALs) remained largely
    unexploited because of, among other reasons, the security problem in the area.
    Presently over 50 per cent of the country’s livestock population is based in the ASALs and these
    areas account for more than 80 percent of eco-tourism interests in the country. The livestock
    sector accounts for 90 per cent of employment and more than 95 per cent of family incomes in
    the ASALs. Most of the livestock slaughtered in major urban centres today originate from these
    areas. In spite of the available potential, the areas have the highest incidence of poverty
    averaging about 65 per cent and very low access to basic social services. The infrastructure per
    capita is very low compared to the other parts of the country and literacy levels are wanting.
    The NARC Government recognizes the need to integrate ASALs in the overall development
    strategy of the country so that the resources available in the region can be tapped for the benefit
    of the people living in the region.
    The development objective in arid and semi-arid areas is to strengthen rural livelihoods through
    support to livestock and range management, eco-tourism, and where feasible initiating long-term
    irrigation projects to contribute to the overall food production and security in the country.
    Improvement in livestock production and marketing, however, remains the key goal in the
    medium term. Strategies to be adopted will also aim at minimizing stock losses resulting from
    drought. Other Governments objectives for ASALs include improving security and
    communication access to health, education, water, energy, and telecommunications services.
    These objectives will not only promote sustainable livelihoods but also militate against the
    rampant poverty in ASALs.
    8.2 Livestock Development
    Livestock comprising of cows, camels and goats is the main resource for the ASALs. In this
    connection, the Government will implement a broad based livestock development programme in
    the ASALs to improve the welfare of the communities. Similarly, the Government will give
    priority to the marketing of livestock in these areas. Private sector entrepreneurs will in this
    regard be encouraged to establish slaughterhouses and other viable marketing channels for
    export market. The Government will therefore oversee a rapid development of the ASALs
    through development of improved livestock marketing and infrastructure; facilitation of private
    investment in meat processing to help improve the purchasing, processing and marketing of
    livestock. These efforts will similarly focus on rehabilitation of existing community water pans,
    dams and boreholes in collaboration with the private sector, NGOs and other development
    partners; and facilitating production of small stock and camels through disease control measures,
    mainly by strengthening the community based animal health approach.
    To improve animal production and marketing, the Government will make specific interventions
    that include:
    • Providing adequate water for the rangelands by sinking boreholes and constructing
    dams at strategic locations in the region to avoid disruption of the migratory nature of
    the communities;
    37
    • Conducting research on livestock breeds, and particularly on the indigenous livestock,
    with a view to improving the local breeds;
    • Putting in place measures to control environmental degradation and carrying out
    periodic national livestock census;
    • Strengthening the animal health delivery system in the region by providing mobile
    animal health clinics and screening units and disease surveillance mechanisms;
    • Addressing legal and policy barriers to livestock trade, such as livestock movement
    quarantines and cess/taxation;
    • Developing supporting infrastructure, including roads, and stock routes with water
    facilities;
    • Strengthening disease control measures in partnership with regional animal health
    programmes
    • Creating strategic Disease Free Zones to facilitate export of live animals; and
    • Increasing cross-border disease surveillance and cross border conflict resolution and
    management mechanisms;
    8.3 Fishing and Mining Development
    Measures to develop the fishing and mining sub-sectors in the ASALs will also be
    enhanced. In this regard, the Government will:
    • Facilitate private sector development of cooling plants, landing sites for the fishing
    industry in the potential regions;
    • Collaborate with the private sector, NGOs and other stakeholders in sensitizing the
    communities on the nutritional importance of fish and the economic use of other
    resources such as gums, resins and honey; and
    • Assess mineral potential in the regions with a view to exploitation.
    8.4 Tourism Development
    The ASAL areas have a potential for tourism growth as they host most of the country’s game
    reserves and national parks. One of the major problems in the past has been little involvement of
    the local communities in the ASAL areas in addition to lack of adequate motivation to conserve
    these natural resources. The ASAL areas also suffer substantially from human-wildlife conflicts.
    To address these problems and tap the potential in these areas, the Government will:
    • Allocate a larger portion of the revenue generated from game reserves and national
    parks to community projects;
    • Strengthen community based wildlife conservation and other approaches through
    which wildlife can benefit pastoralists directly so as to motivate them to conserve and
    accommodate wildlife in their production systems; and
    • Support development of eco-tourism activities since the areas have very high potential
    for eco-tourism.
    8.5 Trade and Industry Development
    ASAL areas have been characterized by lack of investments. This has been a result of the low
    potential of these areas in attracting investment. However, opportunities can be created for
    investment in livestock based cottage industries such as livestock feed processing plants, leather-
    38
    tanning industries and small to medium scale abattoirs. These will create jobs and reduce
    poverty by raising personal incomes.
    To facilitate commerce and industrial development in the ASALs the medium term focus will be
    on:
    • Improving infrastructure especially the road network and the telecommunications
    system to facilitate free movements and exchange of goods and services;
    • Facilitating the establishment of livestock based industries in pastoralist areas and;
    • Offering appropriate investment incentives for private investors targeting these areas.
    8.6 Disaster and Emergency Response Co-ordination
    The development programmes outlined for the ASALs face special risks related to natural
    disasters. The country, particularly in the ASAL regions, has in the past suffered from disasters
    whose effects would have been minimized. However, this has not been so because of lack of
    disaster management policy, early warning system/information being limited to only ten
    districts, lack of co-ordination of agencies involved in disaster management and response, lack
    of appropriate policy on natural resource management in ASAL areas, lack of resources for
    maintenance of strategic food reserves, and poor accessibility to disaster prone areas. In order to
    effectively cope with disasters and reduce their effects, the Government will undertake the
    following measures:
    • Strengthen food distribution and targeting mechanism;
    • Develop and implement a disaster management policy; and
    • Establish community based drought early warning systems, in all relevant districts,
    that provide timely information to decision makers at all levels.
    8.7 Land Tenure
    The land tenure systems in pastoral areas have constrained their social and economic
    development. The communal land use, access, controls and management is central to pastoral
    production systems but is poorly recognized in current land tenure arrangements. Currently
    there are three legal land holding categories. These include Government land, Private land, and
    Trust land. Trust land is the dominant land tenure system in ASALs. However, under the Trust
    land Act, rights and interests of residents under customary law have suffered through statutory
    allocation of land to individuals or government institutions. Pastoralists have lost land to
    wildlife conservation, to military exercise grounds and other uses. Land tenure and land
    ownership among pastoralist communities therefore needs to be resolved through appropriate
    legal framework in order to diffuse inter-ethnic conflicts, competition over critical communal
    resources and to provide an effective system through which the natural resource base can be
    improved and managed on a sustainable basis by the communities themselves. In this
    connection the Government will:
    • Undertake data based inventories of the nature of tenure arrangements, resource
    planning and use and avail the results for public inspections and reference;
    • Investigate and where necessary declare a moratorium in all Trust land areas, halting
    any ongoing adjudication processes, until the necessary land reforms are legislated.
    Such a moratorium will target groups trying to irregularly register crucial grazing
    areas; and
    39
    • Establish credible land control boards that are acceptable and respected by the local
    communities.
    8.8 Health and Education
    Population increase in ASALs is intensifying pressure on social services and environmental
    base. It is therefore essential that the existing monoculture relying on the livestock resource base
    is supplemented through diversification of income sources and livelihoods. Improved provision
    of education and training to pastoralists in ASAL areas thus becomes crucial.
    The medium term policy focus for education in ASALs will therefore be on:
    • Initiating out of school programmes for pastoralist children and continue testing out
    the mobile schools approach;
    • Developing linkages and equivalencies so that pastoralist children receiving non-formal
    education can move to the formal system at various levels;
    • Extending bursary schemes for children in the pastoralist areas;
    • Providing resources for infrastructure development to improve schooling facilities and
    equipment and strengthening boarding institutions to cater for nomadic pupils;
    At the same time provision of health services should recognize the people’s needs and lifestyle.
    The existing health facilities have to be made more accessible, properly stocked, staffed and
    improved in terms of infrastructure and equipment relevant to the social and physical
    environment. In this regard, Government efforts will be directed at:
    • Strengthening community-based health care programmes, and promoting mobile
    outreach clinics for remote areas;
    • Ensuring that drugs and equipment meant for health facilities reach the intended
    destinations;
    • Intensifying immunization of vulnerable children and other members of the pastoralist
    community and strengthening district capacity to detect and contain epidemics; and
    • Providing public health education to communities for preventive and promotive health
    care.
    8.9 Security and Law Enforcement
    Conflicts among Kenyan pastoralists have been frequent and have led to loss of life, property,
    increased levels of insecurity and vulnerability among the people. The proliferation of arms and
    the rising commercialization of cattle rustling combined with politicised conflicts have worsened
    the situation. Previous attempts by the Government to address this problem have not been quite
    successful because of inappropriate approaches adopted.
    The Government will therefore address this problem through a mechanism that incorporates clan
    elders, the youth, and women’s movements. The Government will:
    • Strengthen the security apparatus in ASALs through better equipment and through
    better, impartial and accountable response by the provincial administration and the
    security forces;
    • Ensure that that the District security mechanisms work with and support customary
    conflict management modalities; and
    40
    • Increase surveillance and strengthen immigration points at the border entry points to
    curb the large influx of refugees and illegal firearms.
    8.10 Physical Infrastructure Development
    The current poor state of physical infrastructure in ASALs is a major constraint to economic and
    social development. Inadequate road network and water sources are a major stumbling block to
    development. In this connection the Government infrastructure objectives aim at:
    • Bituminizing major roads in arid and semi arid areas like Garissa - Mandera, Isiolo-
    Moyale and Emali-Loitoktok roads.
    • Rehabilitation of the Kapenguria - Lodwar Road to tarmac standards and gravelling
    the Wajir - Moyale, Isiolo-Madogashe and the Maralal-Chemolingot roads to all
    weather roads standard.
    • Utilising relief food in food-for-work road projects in order to provide employment,
    food and improve the condition of the roads.
    • Using community groups in the maintenance of strategic feeder roads inorder to
    provide incomes and strengthen the purchasing power of pastoralists.
    41
    9. CROSS CUTTING ISSUES
    9.1 Introduction
    This Chapter focuses on discussions of financial sector, land administration, environment and
    information and communication technology. These service providing sectors by their nature cut
    across other sectors of the economy.
    9.2 The Financial Sector
    The role of the financial sector in the development process is to mobilize financial resources and
    to allocate those resources efficiently in the economy. The financial sector is the fifth largest
    sector in Kenya with a contribution to GDP of about 10.6 per cent. It also accounts for about 3.8
    per cent of total employment. The ability of Kenya’s financial sector to contribute to
    development process has been undermined by non-performing loans portfolio which stood at
    nearly 30 per cent of the total loans and advances from commercial banks by the end of 2002.
    Other factors that have contributed to the poor performance of the financial system include
    absence of effective competition which has led to persistence of wide interest rate spreads;
    absence of strong and vibrant institutions for long term capital and a legal system characterized
    by long delays in the determination of commercial disputes and enforcement of contracts.
    A sustainable economic recovery programme requires a vibrant and integrated financial sector
    that ensures mobilization of adequate financial resources to finance the required investment.
    Although the financial sector in Kenya is fairly diversified in terms of financial institutions,
    removal of those factors that have constrained effectiveness of the financial sector’s
    intermediation role is necessary. The Government will therefore carry out a comprehensive
    study of the financial sector to identify weaknesses that have impeded growth of the sector and
    reforms that are needed to strengthen its intermediation role. While the assessment exercise is in
    progress, the government will take the following measures:-
    • Accelerate the enactment of Micro-Finance Institutions Act, as a step towards
    enhancing competition in the financial sector.
    • To clean up the balance sheet of government owned banks in preparation for their
    privatization, the Government will set up a non-performing assets resolution fund to
    warehouse the bad debts. In addition, the Government will encourage the private
    sector to establish loan buying companies. To facilitate this process the Government
    will accelerate the implementation of supportive legal and judicial reforms to guide
    settlement of commercial disputes. This will lead to narrowing of the interest rates
    spread.
    • Enhance tax incentives to encourage more savings through the pension schemes by
    removing the maximum allowable tax deductibility of contributions.
    • Review the tax incentives structure to encourage contributors to opt to withdraw from
    schemes after retirement age by making withdrawals at and after retirement tax-free.
    9.3 Land Administration and Survey
    Land is one of the most important resources as it is the origin of most natural resources and the
    base upon which activities, e.g. agriculture are carried out. Land is also important as a store of
    wealth. The country however does not have a clearly articulated land policy and hence
    important issues such as land use, management, tenure, reforms, environmental protection,
    planning and conflict resolution are currently inadequately addressed through the existing
    systems. Moreover land administration operated on the basis of outdated legal framework and
    many legislations making conveyance a nightmare. Other problems facing land administration
    42
    include inaccurate and insufficient land records and lack of a strategy for management of
    emerging informal urban settlements creating a fertile ground for corruption.
    Resolving the land and administration problems will be a critical requirement for sustained
    economic recovery. It will also be vital for minimizing conflicts and tensions between various
    communities. Recognizing the serious problems facing land administration, and the contribution
    that effective land administration would make to the economic development process, the
    Government appointed a Commission of Inquiry into existing Land Laws, tenure systems, and
    records with a view to making recommendations to improve land administration.
    During the first half of FY2003/04, the Government will develop clear time bound action plan
    for implementing the recommendations of the Commission. Some of the areas that will require
    immediate attention by the Government include computerization of land records.
    9.4 Environment and Natural Resources
    Economic recovery needs to be sustainable if the objectives of poverty reduction and
    employment creation are to be achieved. This Economic Recovery Action Plan takes
    cognizance of the need to achieve the broad macro and sectoral objectives and targets without
    compromising the health of the environment. Kenya faces a serious environmental challenge due
    to mismanagement of the sector by the previous Administrations. The problem has been
    compounded by rampant poverty in the country because wood-fuel and charcoal are the main
    energy sources for cooking and lighting used by the poor people putting tremendous pressure on
    forest resources. The symptoms of the environmental damage include deforestation, soil erosion
    and siltation of water reservoir, pollution of river systems from industrial effluents and discharge
    of raw sewage, clogging of lakes and river systems by weed, and increasing air pollution by
    harmful emissions from industries and poorly maintained motor vehicles.
    The other problem that Kenya faces on the environment issue is pollution resulting from solid
    waste such as polythene and plastic generated waste. The problem reflects absence of a policy
    on recycling of waste materials and dysfunctional local authorities.
    In an attempt to address these problems an environmental legislation was enacted providing for
    the establishment of National Environmental Management Authority (NEMA) to oversee the
    management of environment. However, further measures are required to address environmental
    challenges that continue to face the country especially finding alternative and affordable energy
    sources for the rural and urban poor.
    Other measures that will be required to restore and preserve environment include: a
    comprehensive afforestation programme; development of a national policy on antipollution;
    introduction in schools of curriculum on environmental education; and
    development of a policy on recycling.
    9.5 Water and Sanitation
    Despite the fact that Kenyans have identified a strong link between poverty and lack of access to
    improved water supply and sanitation and diminishing water resources, the sector has been
    grossly under-performing due to: inadequate and complex institutional framework; lack of funds
    for new infrastructure investments and for operations and maintenance; and destruction and
    degradation of water resources and the catchments areas. Adequate quantity and quality of water
    is a basic requirement for Kenya’s economic growth and performance.
    Water Resources Management
    43
    Kenya is classified as a chronically water scarce country with a freshwater endowment of only
    647 cubic meters per capita. This per capita availability is projected to fall to 235 cubic meters
    by 2025 as the population increases, and could be even less, if the resource base continues to
    deplete. Water is becoming scarce simply because of a limited national endowment, the
    growing needs of rapidly increasing population, as well as serious water resources degradation.
    In addition to this scarcity, Kenya is highly vulnerable to rainfall variability: droughts are now
    endemic and floods occur quite frequently. This is despite the fact that Kenya’s socio-economic
    development goals are highly dependent on availability of good quality and quantity water.
    Sustainable utilization, development and management of water resources fundamentally
    underpin the achievement of long-term socio-economic goals.
    To ensure availability of adequate water resources, Water Act 2002 as well as the Integrated
    Water Resources Management Strategy (IWRM) propose institutional reforms that separate
    water resources management functions from water supply delivery functions. A Water
    Resources Management Authority (WRMA), to be established under Water Act 2002, will
    manage all water resources in the country. In addition to setting up of the WRMA, catchment
    development and management activities and investments in rehabilitation/expanding water
    resources management infrastructure as well as sustainable storage facilities are urgently needed
    to reverse the current decline.
    Water and Sanitation Services
    The Government recognizes that the current institutional arrangements are inappropriate and a
    bottleneck to achieving the set poverty reduction objectives. The Government proposes to
    undertake comprehensive institutional reforms that will facilitate pro-poverty water and
    sanitation services programmes. Among the key reforms are to:
    • Establish a Water Services Regulatory Board to be responsible for over-seeing water
    services provision and licensing;
    • Establish Water Services Boards to be responsible for water and sanitation services
    provision and asset development;
    • Transfer government water and sanitation services schemes to Services Boards,
    communities and other lower level actors;
    • Implement Private Sector Participation in financing and management of water and
    sanitation services;
    • Develop models for distribution of water and sanitation services to the poor in both
    rural and urban areas; and,
    • Establish Water Services Trust to facilitate financing of water development in rural
    and low income areas of the country.
    In contrast to the past, the government is adopting a programme approach to sector development
    by formulating a sector investment programme as the main vehicle for implementing the
    institutional reforms and infrastructure investment. The sector investment programme will be
    implemented over a 10 year period, based on the 3 year MTEF budget cycle. This programme
    will have a strong focus on providing services to the poor while ensuring availability of adequate
    water for the various competing demands.
    Water for Agriculture/Irrigation and Flood Control
    Agricultural production in Kenya is heavily dependent on rainfall. The main constraint to
    development, income generation and food security in the ASAL areas is inadequate water. To
    promote all year round agriculture and enhance food security, maintenance, construction and
    44
    rehabilitation of existing dams, pans, and drilling of more boreholes and development of
    irrigation schemes will be of critical importance. The irrigation sub-sector will be revived along
    the lines of the new irrigation policy whose main thrust is to separate irrigation infrastructure
    development and maintenance from crop production and marketing. In recent years, floods have
    continued to cause havoc leading to loss of human life and property particularly in the Nyando
    and Nzoia river basins. The strategy that the Government is putting in place involves:
    • Construction of dams across the rivers;
    • Rehabilitation of deforested water catchments;
    • Construction of dykes; and
    • Preparation of an early warning system.
    9.6 Information and Communications Technology
    The Government recognizes the economic value and benefits of information and
    communications technology services both in the rural and urban areas. Information and
    Communications Technology (ICT) is important to the realization of the required improvement
    in productivity and empowerment of the citizenry. The sector has however not been able to
    achieve its objectives due to low penetration of ICT usage in Kenya especially in the rural and
    marginal areas due to high cost of equipment, poor telephone communications service, and lack
    of power supply. In general however, ICT has been bedeviled by the lack of awareness,
    priority, focus, coordination, resources and capacity.
    In order to achieve faster growth in the sector, the Government intends to:-
    • Establish an Inter-Ministerial Committee working closely with the NESC, to
    mainstream ICT into government operations so as to enhance efficiency and
    productivity.
    • Invest in adequate ICT education and training. In this context, the Government will
    streamline the education curriculum to incorporate IT studies to develop appropriate
    skill requirements.
    • Implement a well targeted tax reduction and/or tax incentives on both computer
    software and hardware to make them affordable to micro-enterprises and low-income
    earners;
    • Review the legal framework to remove impediments that have discouraged adoption
    and use of e-commerce;
    • Develop a masterplan for e-government by end of June 2004.
    9.7 Science and Technology
    Science and Technology play special roles in the development of a country. However, in the
    history of this country a wide gap has developed between those who generate and store scientific
    knowledge and technology and the end users. Consequently, there is an urgent need to bridge
    this gap so as to enhance adoption and application of science and technology in productive
    activities.
    In order to address the above need, every Ministry will be required to develop and implement
    strategies that enhance linkage between researchers/technology developers and producers. In
    addition, Ministries will be required to develop strategies for capacity building in beneficiary
    organizations to empower them to make demands on service providers, thus making science and
    technology demand driven.
    45
    9.8 Regional Authorities
    Kenya has established six Regional Development Authorities based on the river basins and large
    water masses to provide balanced integrated multi-sectoral programmes and projects that
    transcend administrative boundaries to rationalise equitable development in the country. The
    general emphasis of the Authorities remain the sustainable utilisation of natural resources
    including water, fisheries, forestry and soils towards poverty reduction in the respective areas
    under their jurisdiction. The functions of these Authorities as they emanate from their
    respective mandates though broad, still remain valid.
    The main challenge facing the Authorities are:
    • Lack of concise regional development policy and frequent relocations from one Ministry to
    another and the arbitrary transfer of potential revenue generating assets to other State
    Corporations.
    • Inadequate funding of the programmes and projects of the Authorities.
    • Political interference in the operations of the authorities.
    To ensure that these Authorities contribute to the economic recovery the Government will:
    • Review the relevance and sustainability of all Regional Development Authorities.
    • Develop and implement an institutional capacity building programme for the viable
    and sustainable Regional Development Authorities.
    • Finalise staff rationalization processes in order to offload idle staff capacity.
    • Recruit qualified technical professionals to spearhead policy formulation and research.
    • Support the Authorities in the development of Regional Data Banks and Early
    Warning Systems for planning and Research within the regions.
    46
    10 IMPLEMENTATION FRAMEWORK
    10.1 Introduction
    To achieve the outcomes set out in this Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and
    Employment Creation it will be important to have an effective implementation, monitoring and
    evaluation framework. This is necessary because failures of past policies and development
    programs were largely due to absence of such an implementation framework and lack of
    political will.
    The NARC government is fully committed to implementing strategies outlined in this Recovery
    Strategy. An appropriate institutional framework that utilizes existing departments and
    institutions to implement actions specified in this Strategy and which facilitates the active
    participation of the private sector, civil society and communities is being developed. Capacity
    gaps have been identified and additional support is being provided. The framework provides for
    regular feedback between agencies entrusted with the implementation.
    10.2 Implementation Matrix
    The implementation of this Strategy is anchored on good governance, economic growth, poverty
    job creation and hence poverty reduction. The implementation matrix, which has been derived
    from the preceding Chapters, is the outcome of the consultation process involving the
    government, private sector, and the civil society. The process also benefited from the Medium
    Term Expenditure Framework budgeting that included public hearings for various sector
    proposals as well as the resource bidding exercise during which the scarce national resources
    were allocated to support the implementation of the actions required in the Economic Recovery
    Strategy.
    The implementation matrix therefore, has been carefully prepared taking into account financial,
    human and institutional resource constraints. The matrix presents a synthesis of sectors and subsectors
    where actions are proposed, the objectives stated, expected outputs identified, who takes
    action and by when specified.
    10.3 The National Economic and Social Council
    One of the major weaknesses that undermined Kenya’s economic reform efforts was inadequate
    consultation between the government and the citizenry. There has been lack of appropriate
    forum through which the synergy between the private sector, the business community, and the
    government could be exploited for the benefit of the country. As a result, independent views and
    advice of the private sector and the expectations of the government could not be synchronised.
    In the past attempts have been made to address the problem of implementation but without
    success. It was proposed in the 8th National Development Plan that a high level advisory and
    consultative forum on economic management be established then to assist in the monitoring of
    the implementation of government decisions. The Strategy proposed the formation of a
    Presidential Commission. Although the Commission was formed in 1996, it remained dormant
    because of lack of political support. Some consultations took place under the Joint Industrial and
    Commercial Committee (JICC), but the forum neither provided the government with
    independent advice nor did it make it possible for the government to stay on course with good
    policies.
    To strengthen consultation between the government and the citizenry as well at to create a forum
    through which such dialogue can be conducted meaningfully, the Cabinet has approved the
    47
    establishment of National Economic and Social Council (NESC) to advice the government on
    policies that may be required to address emerging socio-economic issues. The NESC is to be
    established by an Act of Parliament.
    10.4 Role of Ministries and Government Departments
    10.4.1 Role of Ministries
    The process of reforming government functions has been ongoing for sometime now. The
    PRSP/MTEF budgeting process has been under implementation since 1999. Within this
    framework government ministries have been grouped into eight sectors for effective budgeting
    and management of public resources. The NARC government further refined this by taking into
    account new political dispensation and core functions of the government as defined by the new
    administration. The eight sectors are: finance; public administration; public safety, law and
    order; agriculture and rural development; tourism, trade and industry; physical infrastructure;
    information and communications technology; and the social sector. In addition to these an
    appropriate macroeconomic framework has been recognized as vital to the realization of
    strategies specified in each of these sectors. Given the strong Government’s commitment to
    deliver the election promises and the high public expectation, the government and implementing
    agencies are to be held accountable for the realization of strategies set out in this Strategy.
    The responsibility of ministries and government departments are clearly defined in the
    Presidential Circular No. 1 of 2003. Thus implementing free primary education within the
    social sector for example is to be executed within the mandate of the Ministry of Education and
    related institutions such as the Teachers Service Commission. Reconstruction and rehabilitation
    of physical infrastructure especially roads and up-grading of slums will be implemented by the
    Ministry of Roads, Public Works and Housing. Similarly local government reforms, public
    sector performance, regulatory and competition law reforms, governance, and security issues are
    to be implemented by the public administration and public safety, law and order sectors.
    Keeping stakeholders fully informed and on board is crucial to the success of this Recovery
    Strategy. Consequently, regular sharing of information through workshops, seminars, and even
    through the information communications technology are an integral part of the implementation,
    monitoring and evaluation. A quarterly progress report on implementation of this economic
    recovery programme will be prepared and published by NESC. Collaboration with the non-state
    partners, the Non-Governmental Organizations and the Civil Society will be coordinated by the
    relevant sector/ministry to ensure that the participation of all stakeholders is fully integrated in
    the implementation process.
    10.4.2 Implementation at the Local Level
    Poverty is area specific. Interventions aimed at creating employment and reducing poverty must
    equally be area specific. Implementation of a number of actions in the Recovery Strategy will
    take place either at the district, local authority or at the location levels. Local Authorities are
    already receiving substantial amounts of resources from the exchequer through the Local
    Authority Transfer Fund (LATF), for purposes of implementing programs at the local levels.
    The Government is also disbursing resources directly to the districts and constituencies such as
    those for the District Roads and the HIV/AIDS funds for interventions at those levels. Several
    NGOs are also operating at the local level implementing a number of poverty reduction
    interventions.
    48
    The Government is committed to the decentralization and devolution of power as one of the
    modalities to ensure that services are delivered effectively and efficiently to communities. The
    equivalent of the NESC will be established at district levels to assist in effecting the actions
    outlined in the Recovery Strategy at the district, constituency and community levels. At
    the local level the Council will take the form of a restructured District Development Committees
    that brings together the private sector, NGOs, the government departments and civil society. A
    devolved monitoring and evaluation will be set up and will provide mechanisms of tracking
    progress.
    The District Documentation Centers (DIDC) are being strengthened and equipped with relevant
    information so that they become centers of excellence in terms of area specific information.
    Poverty maps showing the levels of poverty in every district, division and location as well as
    other social and economic indicators are to be availed to the DIDC for purposes of enlightening
    the communities to demand for their rights at the community levels. The intention of the
    Government is to empower the communities with the knowledge to create the necessary
    awareness and to enable them to demand for services at the district and constituencies so that
    they may be able to question the leadership on the outcome of such funds.
    10.4.3 Harambee
    Harambee was originally started soon after independence, as a way of mobilizing community
    initiatives to provide for social welfare needs such as schools, health centers and cattle dips.
    Over time, however, Harambee has increasingly been misused, leading to corruption and
    tremendous waste in scarce resources. While preserving the spirit of Harambee in community
    initiatives, the Government intends to scale down Harambee as it currently stands. Instead the
    Government will support a planned and accountable form of community-based initiatives, aimed
    at wealth creation, service provision and poverty reduction. The Government will put in place a
    social Action Fund to support this initiative.
    10.4.4 Internal Support Structures
    The Government has adopted several internal support structures that will augment the
    implementation of the Recovery Strategy. The Public Expenditure Review (PER) will be
    institutionalized and reports produced annually as part of expenditure tracking and effective
    implementation. The Public Expenditure Management (PEM) program has also been put in
    place. The Country Financial Accountability Assessment (CFAA) and Integrated Financial
    Management Information System (IFMIS) are being implemented to strengthen the financial
    management and accountability for better implementation.
    10.5 Monitoring and Evaluation
    Monitoring the extent to which activities in this recovery Strategy are implemented is critical for
    the Government. The government has utilized the output of the several studies that were
    initiated within the framework of the PRSP to inform the process of establishing an appropriate
    institutional framework for monitoring and evaluation of the recovery Strategy and reporting on
    the millennium development goals. The Government has identified ingredients of establishing a
    national monitoring and evaluation framework. Monitoring and evaluation will take place at
    three levels: national; district/local authority; and at community levels.
    At the national level, the attached matrix provides a logical framework for Monitoring and
    Evaluation. Targets and indicators have been identified and are integrated in the matrix and will
    be disseminated at lowest levels. The same indicators will be made available through the DIDC
    to assist the communities to participate in the monitoring and evaluation.
    49
    ANNEX II
    Table 1: Selected Economic and Financial Indicators, 2000-2006
    2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
    Est. Est. Proj. Proj. Proj.
    (Annual percentage changes, unless otherwise
    specified)
    National income and prices
    GDP (At factor cost and constant prices) -0.2 1.2 1.1 2.3 3.7 5.1 6.5
    GDP (At Market prices, current prices) 6.6 10.8 9.8 7.3 7.0 9.1 10.8
    Consumer price index (dec. to dec.) 10.0 5.8 2.0 3.8 3.5 3.5 3.6
    External sector (on the basis of US$)
    Exports -1.2 7.1 4.8 5.9 8.7 8.0 7.2
    Imports, c.I.f. 6.2 6.3 0.6 7.5 9.1 10.0 12.6
    Non-oil imports, c.I.f. 4.2 11.9 1.0 10.4 11.8 12.4 13.4
    Export volume 2.7 6.8 3.9 3.2 4.9 6.3 6.1
    Import volume 15.4 18.7 -2.7 5.1 4.2 7.4 10.0
    Money and credit (growth rates %)
    Reserve money
    Net domestic assets of the CBK -1.65 1.80 11.82 7.42 7.45 5.91 6.22
    Broad money (M3X) 4.1 2.3 10.2 7.4 7.5 5.9 6.2
    Gross national saving (% of GDP) 12.3 11.2 10.1 10.8 12.0 13.8 15.5
    Of which: Central Government 1.0 -0.4 -0.5 -0.5 -0.4 0.1 0.3
    Other 11.3 11.6 10.7 11.2 12.3 13.7 15.2
    Gross Investment (% of GDP)
    Fixed capital formation 15.4 14.7 13.6 15.0 16.6 19.0 22.2
    Central Government 2.4 2.4 2.3 3.7 4.1 5.0 6.0
    Other 13.0 12.2 11.3 11.3 12.5 14.0 16.2
    External current account incl. Official
    transfers (% of GDP)
    -3.8 -3.8 -4.6 -4.9 -5.7 -7.5 -7.5
    External current account excl. official
    transfers (% of GDP)
    -4.6 -3.8 -4.6 -5.1 -6.0 -7.7 -7.7
    Central Government finance (% of GDP)
    Revenue 23.1 22.0 21.3 21.8 21.6 21.1 21.5
    Total Expenditure 25.6 26.1 25.2 26.3 26.2 25.9 12.8
    Deficit excluding grants commitment basis -2.4 -4.1 -3.9 -4.4 -4.6 -4.8 -2.3
    Deficit including grants -0.5 -2.3 -3.2 -3.6 -3.4 -3.0 -1.2
    Current balance, excluding grants 1.0 -0.5 -0.5 -0.5 -0.4 0.1 0.3
    Government external debt (US $ millions) 5252 4884 4772 4979 5339 5815 6385
    Government external debt service ratio (%) 12.91 9.17 11.01 9.51 8.29 7.43 4.02
    Government foreign Interest payments ratio 3.89 3.03 3.03 2.71 1.90 1.63 1.45
    (In millions of US$ unless otherwise specified)
    Overall balance of payments 294 61 103 197 476 476 -33
    Gross international reserves (end of period) 1398 1459 1423 1620 2096 2572 2539
    Gross international reserves (in months of
    imports)
    4 4 4 4 5 6 5
    Nominal GDP at market prices (in billions of
    Kshs.)
    796 883 969 1040 1113 1214 1345
    Exports of goods and non-factor services (in
    bn Kshs.)
    211 234 245 256 280 303 324
    Exchange rate (Kshs/US$, period average) 76.20 78.60 78.62

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