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Kenya’s Food Imports Bill Increases To $950m in Six Months

Kenya’s food import bill has increased to Sh103.34 billion ($940.20million), in six months, between January and June 2021.
According to the import data gathered by the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA), the imported food, –  including live farm animals for slaughter and breeding— and beverages hit a record high with pressure on household budgets that have already been damaged by the Covid-19 pandemic.
The figure shows Sh12.35 billion, or 13.57 percent, more than the Sh91 billion that was spent on food imports in a similar period last year, according to the data collated by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS).
The expenditure on food imports in the half-year period is even higher than the Sh96.41 billion that was spent in the first half of 2017 when a biting drought hurt crop and fodder production hit —triggering a national crisis that forced the Treasury to allow subsidies and waiver of import duties to smooth purchase of key food items such as maize, rice and milk powder from abroad.
Analysts attributed the latest rally in the food import bill to enhanced shipments of items such as grain and cereals to cover for production shortfalls locally on the back of late planting in the March-April-May main crop season and a weakened local currency against the US dollar, which meant importers paid more.
Data shows there has been enhanced importation of Kenya’s major foods such as maize, unmilled wheat, and wheat flour and rice this year— contributing to the bigger import bill. For example, maize imports from Uganda and Tanzania in the first five months of the year jumped nearly two-fold to cross 1.38 million 90-kilogramme bags from 495,813 bags last year, according to the Ministry of Agriculture’s data.
Wheat imports in the January-May 2021 period also increased 12.30 percent to 9.1 million 90-kg bags from 8.1 million bags last year, while rice volumes bumped 92.71 percent to 2.4 million 90-kg bags from nearly 1.25 million bags.
A similar trend was witnessed in beans imports, which climbed to 287,031 bags in the review period from 215,014 bags, a 33.49 percent growth, the ministry’s data shows.
Several parts of the country have witnessed below average rainfall, with some areas suffering famine for much of this year.
Authorities have warned the country’s food security situation could worsen in the North-Eastern region in the coming months should the upcoming short rainfall season (from October) record below-average performance.
“We are already transitioning from the alert to alarm phase, and should the upcoming October rains also fail, then Kenya will be facing a very grave emergency indeed,” Dr Stephen Jackson, the UN Resident Coordinator in Kenya, told a meeting to discuss the drought situation in Nairobi last week.
The impact of the expensive food imports is already being felt among Kenyan households amid rising inflation.
Food inflation for July, for example, stood at 8.8 percent, the highest since May 2020 at the height of Covid shutdowns and travel restrictions, pushed by prices of cooking oil and vegetables, according to Central Bank of Kenya analysis.
Omotayo Araoye

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