But right now we are importing goods from China & India worth billions - that we can probably produce by encouraging Chinese to set it up here. I think 4% (our normal growth) factors all the forward & backward linkages with Western Capital/Debt (IFC/Equities/Venture Capital). What I believe we are losing out is Chinese on private sector. Public sector is doing very well having tapped Chinese to build roads, railways, dams & etc...they still get their usual 10% for graft..but Chinese deliver on time+agreed cost. Now close home - Ethiopia - are tapping chinese - both for public & private sector - and they are growing by 8-10%. China is now the big top dog. If you aint talking to Chinese - you aint talking to anybody. Our private sector simply need to re-configure.
I wonder how far DL went with his industrial park with Chinese in Eldoret. Those are kind of partnership we need. Huge industrial park - both private & public from Chinese.
I disagree that we need to go slow on public investment - we cannot afford to lower taxes or grant incentive to local guys - we have huge deficit in roads, power, housing - that can do with more public investment - not less.
Private sector should stop looking at small pie in Kenya - but start making talking Chinese! There is barely any local company that are tapping into CHina.
Last year even with election and drought economy grew by 4%, that's our latent growth. Ethiopia is a export driven economy while kenya is a more consumer based economy. All that chinese investment in Ethiopia is for export, leveraging cheap labour and government free land. Kenya even EPZ are diverting export goods to local market. Instead of giving Chinese companies incentives only why not give private sector incentives irregardless whether foreign or local? BTW of late there are several private equity companies that are investing in local companies. Also companies like kenafric and kevian juice are sourcing cheap funding from IFC or the duetch development bank. Until there's sufficient credit growth there's no way kenya is hitting 8% growth. And if it does it'll be purely driven by government spending which means the kawaida mwanainchi wont feel that growth.