Yes the government should concentrate on infrastructure and security. In terms of infrastructure e.g it used to take a whole day from Rimuruti to Maralal (samburu) and its only 120km. Now its just 1 hr , more interior roads need to be done even if its better murram. The security is a major a problem, an outsider would have difficulty time investing in a feedlot with accompanying dam for irrigation to grow fodder. In dry season the locals would just invade the farm if not worse. To construct a 1 acre dam it cost about 4m so clearly, a lot of people or the county/central government can afford to construct several dams. In some of this areas there need not be a major intervention, basically planting fodder during the rainy season then storing it for the dry season and dams for water would suffice. There's no need for subsidies or even tax credit just get the counties to build dams and national government to ensure security.
There's plenty of food in kenya its only people without money that are starving(go to kapenguria or maralal and there's everything). The solution is to make sure the locals engage in an economic activity that they can derive income from. Guys like us from Nyandarua are providing a valuable service, buying off this animals so that they can have money to buy food. And this are livestock people they sell their animals to make money. Rimuruti in likipia is a major livestock market where baringo,pokots and samburu sell their animals every thursday. The buyers are normally from nakuru/nairobi and central kenya. You can buy anything from emaciated livestock to fatten to ready to slaughter livestock. Even one Mureithi nderitu has invested in a modern abattoir https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/business/article/2000132105/firm-puts-sh220m-in-meat-firm
That's only part of the story. The "unavailability" of food doesn't literally mean that there is no food; it also has to do with there being enough so that it is easily affordable. So, in that sense, Kenya does not have much food right now. Food in Kenya is actually very expensive. The cost of a whole chicken in Kenya is probably not that different from that in, say, the UK, and that's without taking into account the huge disparity in average incomes. The same will cost about half in China, and, again that's raw figures that don't take into account disparities in incomes. If one scales for income differences, then it is evident that Kenyans are paying through the nose to eat.
So what is required is agricultural production on such a scale that prices force prices to go down but the sales will be of a magnitude that will keep the produces in the gravy. Keep in mind that a real problem in Kenya at such times is that of people hoarding food, e.g. even maize, to drive up prices, something that would not be possible with the large-scale production of affordable food. To look at it simply as a lack of money---and, as RV Pundit has proposed, use MPESA to send money to the starving---misses a huge part of the picture and ensures that the problem will persist.
Yes, you guys from Nyandarua are indeed providing a service, in that you are helping the people eat for a bit longer, although there is some amusing irony in the idea of farmers in a scheme that involves others "
buying off this animals so that they can have money to buy food". But what happens next year, after they have eaten that money and there is another drought? And, anyway, how many of the starving 2-million+ have livestock to sell to Nyandarua?
We have become a nation of thieves, fly-by-night hustlers, and assorted smoke-and-mirrors types. From top to bottom. A change is urgently needed. We need to first focus on the basics---food, health (simple clean water and toilets etc.), individual security, and so forth---and the disciplined planning and hard work that is required to deliver on those. And it is the government that should lead on that. From top to bottom. Right now we have the absurdity of the Deputy President showing up to tout the government's successes---
preparing today's toddlers to be tomorrow's online billionaires!---in a place where people and starving (and for whom the government is sending our urgent "please help!" messages), a place from which he has had to run away because of never-ending banditry!