Kenya's private sector is huge. It employs 3 times the public/gov sector in formal jobs. This is not true in every country. Informal sector is even bigger. The trick is to get the informal sector into formal sector.
Pundit,
FYI. The private sector controls very little.
Size or numbers alone do not necessarily equate to power. Also, the "private sector" is, by far, the major employer in just about every country in the world, including China and Ethiopia. So yours is not a convincing response to a claim that Kenya's private sector controls little.
And when it comes to actually controlling anything, the informal+jua-kali sector,
which is a part of the private sector, should not even get a mention. Obviously. Yet it is the largest employment sector in Kenya.
Moving on past that: I was curious about how big this informal sector is in Kenya. I looked at numerous data sources, among those I found informative is the 2015 report from the UN Economic Commission for Africa. The figures are around 75% among men and 80% among women (% of total employment). A UNECA report of the same year indicates that---because of a lack of various protections, opportunities to upgrade skills, the lack of productive income---this lot is largely trapped in poverty. Interestingly, 30 years ago, the figures were almost "reversed". This summary and the corresponding full report, from the Brookings Institution, are interesting:
http://www.brookings.edu/blogs/africa-in-focus/posts/2016/05/16-tapping-kenya-economic-growth-golubskiThe other thing I was curious about is the contribution of this sector to GDP. Hard figures are hard to come by, for the obvious reason: the folks in the sector are not much into the business of reporting statistics. The figures I have seen appear to have been arrived at by looking at the formal sector and its contribution and then subtracting that from the total. Those figures lead to the inevitable conclusion expressed in numerous reports---that the sector is one of low productivity and relatively low contribution to GDP. (In Kenya, as in most of Africa, the high-productivity sectors are not creating many jobs.)
Prospects for the future:
Over the last year or so, the World Bank has produced a few reports that are of significance to Kenya and the rest of Africa. (Off the top of my head, a good one to read would be "Africa's Demographic Transition: Dividend or Disaster?" See Google)
- One of those was somewhat "negative"---that around 1950 (or so) most of the world's poor were in Asia, but Africa has increasingly taken over that "market" and, on the present path, will have cornered it completely in a a couple of decades or so. Even with "Africa Rising". (It appears that the male member is rising more than the economy is ... )
- The one I mention above states that merely not reproducing like rabbits will not be enough to make a significant change. The reports recommends the "East Asian" way at such a phase. A part of that is developing a serious export-driven economy---not of scrap metal and vegetables.
- The World Bank's most detailed report on Kenya this year recommends that Kenya focus on improving commercial agriculture, which is still the mainstay of Kenya's economy, as a major path to poverty reduction. (There are good reasons for that, whether one chooses to look at 19th-Century USA or 20th-Century East Asia.) What is Kenya doing in that regard? I'm not sure. But I hear a lot of noise to the effect that those at the bottom will soon be able to lift themselves up by producing "apps" (Konza City, Silicon Savannah, etc.) or using MPESA to join the financial industry. The sexy stuff.
- One recent report I read from the African Development Bank is to-the-point on exports: Kenya will not get far as long as its main exports are what the report calls "low processed agriculture" (specifically tea and cut flowers). This,of course, is the story of Africa---from Ghana and Ivory Cost, producing most of the world's cocoa and then importing chocolates etc., to Nigeria, exporting crude oil like nobody's business and then spending billions on importing the products of refining. (By way of contrast, take a look at what Singapore makes out of oil.)
I like the optimism expressed in the Brookings Institution report: the "African Lions"! Goes well with "Africa Rising!". And of Kenya, RV Pundit writes of "
by far the most modern country in East Africa...with economy bigger and more sophisticated than many in Africa". Certainly true enough. But at the core of that is no more than an observation that even among the down-and-out there will be some at or near the top. C- students in the sub-class of D students. One needs to look at the rest of the class.
As I see it, Africa's prospects are not especially bright on the present path. Whether there is the will or motivation to change that is far from clear. I think the stated end-goal requires more than endlessly stating goals and visions and whatever.