

January 27 - Simon Mbugua of PNU loses his Kamukunji Constituency parliamentary seat as the 2007 election result was annulled by a court in January 2011.Kosgey is subject to corruption investigations and also is one of six Kenyans charged by the International Criminal Court January 4 - The Minister of Industrialisation Henry Kosgey gives up his cabinet post.January 4 - A delegation led by Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga fails to solve the 2010–2011 Ivorian crisis.January 1–10 people die when a bus veers off-road in Ngarariga, near Nairobi.Chief Justice: Johnson Gicheru then Willy Mutunga.While the agency said it had a favourable medium-term outlook for the Kenyan economy, "significant challenges remain against the backdrop of slow global economic growth and tight financial conditions". In May, the IMF said it had reached a preliminary agreement with Kenya that would provide the government with access to another $1 billion in credit - increasing its total commitments to $3.52 billion. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has nevertheless hailed the government for responding "promptly" to the economic challenges it faces and for "prudent" spending.

Odinga's Azimio alliance had on Wednesday described the budget as "deeply flawed" and said it "prolongs and worsens the suffering of the people".Įarlier this year, the opposition staged several anti-government protests over the cost of living crisis which degenerated into sometimes deadly street clashes between police and demonstrators.Īn opinion poll published in the leading newspaper Daily Nation on Wednesday found that 90 percent of Kenyans were opposed to the finance bill. One of the most contentious provisions is a 1.5 percent levy on the salaries of all tax-paying Kenyans to fund an affordable housing programme. The proposed legislation calls for new or increased taxes on items including fuel and food, as well as mobile money transfers, beauty products and digital content. Ruto has said that the finance bill, which sailed through a second reading in parliament on Wednesday, will ease the debt burden, stimulate the economy and create jobs.īut opponents have warned the new measures will further hit people already struggling to make ends meet as the cost of living crisis bites. Protests were held earlier this month in Nairobi over the proposed tax hikes © SIMON MAINA / AFP/File Kenya is also sitting on a public debt mountain of almost $70 billion or about 67 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), and its repayment costs have jumped as the shilling sinks to record lows of more than 139 to the dollar. Kenyans are already feeling the pinch from soaring prices for basic necessities, along with a sharp drop in the value of the local currency and the worst drought in four decades.Įconomic growth slowed last year to 4.8 percent from 7.6 percent in 2021, reflecting the global fallout from Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the drought buffeting the vital agriculture sector.
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We have to sacrifice for the future," Ndung'u told local station Citizen TV earlier on Thursday. "We have to have some short-term sacrifices for us to achieve the long-term. Ruto is seeking to replenish the government's coffers and repair a heavily-indebted economy inherited from his predecessor Uhuru Kenyatta, who splurged on major infrastructure projects. The 3.6-trillion shilling ($25.7 billion) financial plan for 2023/24 is the first since Ruto took the helm of the East African powerhouse in September last year following a bitterly contested election race.īut there has been widespread public anger over plans for a raft of tax hikes including on food and fuel expected to generate an extra $2.1 billion in revenue.Īnd just as Treasury Minister Njuguna Ndung'u began reading the budget, lawmakers allied with opposition leader Raila Odinga's coalition walked out of the chamber to cheers and jeers.Īlthough Ruto pledged on the campaign trail to help poor Kenyans known as "hustlers", he has been accused of introducing policies that have actually made their lives harder.
