There is a lot of growth outside m-Pesa & related tech (a confluence of finance & intermediation with telecommunication) - infrastructure expansion is greater than ever - we are building more roads, rails, ports, power lines, power stations than ever.
we are doing great in real estate - we are building more houses, malls, hotels, offices, and institutions than ever before!
Devolution is also helping drive gov expenditure (compared to national gov that generally get hobbled by judicial disputes - see Big 4 housing agenda now - the year has ended and judiciary has blocked deduction) - we see counties all over doing great stuff - from Turkana to Mandera to Makueni - there is some huge visible progress.
The economy has also generally benefitted from very low oil prices - I mean Kibaki regime pretty much had to contend with oil at 140 dollars a barrel - now we have been enjoying about half that.
We are seeing a rebound in the tourism sector - now firmly at 2M tourists - and the sector is looking up.
Agriculture the mainstay of the economy isn't doing badly either - horticulture (33% annual growth that Ndii ignored) is now easily approaching 2B dollars a year - as well as tea - and the dairy sector continues to see double-digit growth. We have issues with maize, sugar-cane, and coffee - that Ndii uses to drive his NASA point - but generally, the agricultural sector is doing great.
Manufacturing has generally kept pace with economy - at around 10% - with agro-processing not doing badly - EPZ are also not doing badly - yes a lot needs to be done - to get this sector to grow to 15% of GDP in the medium term - and at least 20% of the GDP in the long term - including lowering electricity cost - and sorting out teething problem at SGR.
Within the social sector - we continue to make a huge investment in the education sector (both at individual and gov level), we are seeing sustained population decline (demographic dividends will start to kick in soon nationwide), we are seeing more health care investment - HIV, Malaria a& TB pretty much under control & people are living longer. Generally, the quality of life in Kenya is improving. Poverty has gone down 10% the last decade - and I believe with devolution - we see even greater dent against poverty in the ASAL regions - Turkana, Manderas, Wajirs.
Despite corruption and red tape - Jubilee are nailing the ease of doing business - from being ranked around 120 to now 61 (always in the most improved) - only 3 African countries have better ease of doing business than Kenya now - Rwanda, Mauritius and I think Morocco. Jubilee are targetting position 50(corruption notwithstanding). This Gov has achieved it by leveraging technology - digitizing gov services, all the huduma centers, and namely everything has become more transparent and accountable - thanks to stuff like E-Citizen.
See how Pundit struggles to finger any genuine growth outside the M-Pesa ecosystem.