Moonki..you're talking nonsense...as always.Your cannot use rebased revised figures to compare.Nobody knows for sure when those figures went off.If we rebase today..to 2012..5yrs as is recommended..would you wait for new figures so we can compare.
Please see (b) above. Instead of the usual petty insults, take some time to try and understand it; it might also help you to carefully read the KNBS explanations. And, briefly: the rebased figures are used for the very simple reason that they are in fact more accurate; see (a) above. They are the figures that KNBS now reports and which everyone, except RV Pundit, now uses in analyses. Take a look at, for example, what the World Bank has in its books and the basis on which it analyses the Kenyan economy (scroll down):
http://data.worldbank.org/country/kenya(What figure does the World Bank give for, say, 2010? When people look at the figure for that year, should they go with the World Bank or with RV Pundit of Nipate.org?)
And here is a randomly selected source reporting on Kenya's economic growth:
http://www.theglobaleconomy.com/Kenya/Economic_growth/(You can find plenty of such all over the place ... people using the new figures, and with good-and-obvious reason.)
It is possible that KNBS, World Bank, IMF, etc. that are all using the new figures for long-range analysis and comparison are also "talking nonsense", but I'm going to go with them.
If we rebase today, to 2012, the whole point would be to have more accurate figures. Having obtained the more accurate figures, we would, as a matter of simple logic, base our comparisons on those more accurate figures. Why? Because the whole point of rebasing would be to get more accurate figures to use in analysis. (I hope that repetition helps.)