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Kenya enters the second half of 2025 with a cautious optimism that is as grounded as it is pragmatic. Quarterly figures confirmed a respectable 4.9% year-on-year GDP growth in Q1, largely buoyed by agriculture and manufacturing—both underpinned by favorable weather and domestic resilience . Yet beneath the surface, private-sector activity showed cracks: the PMI fell to 49.6 in May, marking the first contraction in seven months and signalling flagging business confidence .

Still, the macroeconomic environment lends cause for encouragement. Inflation, which hovered around 3.8–4.1%, remains firmly within the Central Bank of Kenya’s target range . This has created policy space for further monetary easing: on August 12, the Central Bank delivered its seventh consecutive rate cut, bringing the benchmark to 9.50% . Cheaper credit should help thaw the private sector frost, especially for SMEs.
Public debt remains a shadow, however. With debt still elevated and revenues lagging, the government is seeking renewed support from the IMF—leaning toward a funded programme to manage debt servicing and fiscal gaps . The challenge will be balancing fiscal consolidation with sustaining growth.
Key sectors are stepping into the spotlight. Agriculture, a mainstay for millions of rural Kenyans, is performing strongly thanks to good rains, subsidised inputs, and farmer confidence, the latter buoyed by a March survey revealing that 83% of farmers expected improvements in the next quarter . Manufacturing and ICT are also contributing—though with more muted momentum—as digital transformation and tech hubs drive progress, particularly in urban areas .

Finance, tourism, and construction are staging partial recoveries, assisted by investor-friendly reforms, Special Economic Zones and renewed foreign capital inflows. Kenya’s foreign-exchange reserves have strengthened, helping to stabilise the shilling and assuage import pressures .
Geopolitical and global threats remain. The looming expiry of AGOA in September poses a risk to apparel exporters and thousands of jobs . Rising oil and fertiliser prices, market shocks and regional tensions could further derail growth. But so long as Kenya maintains prudent policy, agricultural resilience, and room for monetary stimulus, a growth range of around 5% in the coming six months remains plausible.
Why It Matters to Ordinary Kenyans
For farmers, robust rains and access to inputs mean better yields and incomes. For urban households and small businesses, lower interest rates could bring credit within reach—funding investments, expansion or even debt relief. A stable shilling helps ease living costs on fuel and imported goods. Job seekers, particularly in tech, logistics, and tourism, may enjoy more openings as investor confidence slowly returns. Yet, reverberations from high debt and global strain could translate into pressure on services if fiscal prudence tilts into austerity. All told, for the average Kenyan, good policy paired with sectoral dynamism could mean modest but meaningful relief—and a pathway toward more inclusive growth.
