Kenya's debt dilemma: Are higher taxes the answer?
The domino effect of Kenya's debt dilemma

It is impossible to discuss Kenya today without referencing the elephant in the room: the country's recently passed Finance Act 2023.

This June 26 Act—in addition to the Kenyan budget—is meant to help the government raise a record revenue of KES2.57 trillion (~$18 billion). This will be 17% higher than the previous year’s revenue, reducing its budget deficit to 4.4% of GDP from 5.8% in the previous year. The government is determined to boost its revenue to enhance its fiscal position and secure funding for upcoming debt obligations.

 

 

Because of this Act, petroleum products are now charged 16% VAT like other products (against the 8% levied in the past), and a 3% housing levy shrinks consumers’ incomes and puts businesses at higher risk. Micro, Small and Medium enterprises (MSMEs) earning an annual turnover of KES25 million (~ $176,000 today) are subject to a 3% turnover tax from the 1% paid

This story is only available to Premium subscribers Subscribe or sign in to finish reading

Not ready to subscribe? Register to read a selection of free stories

Gbemisola Alonge

Gbemisola Alonge

Read Latest

Cold Storage in Africa I: Market size, segmentation, drivers (July 2025)

PREMIUM - 01 JUL 2025

Weekly Africa Macro Update: June 23 - 27, 2025

PREMIUM - 30 JUN 2025

Local-currency PE funds could unlock Africa’s pension capital base

PREMIUM - 27 JUN 2025

Agriculture Transaction Brief: Ghanaian agri-tech firm, Complete Farmer, raises €2.2m ($2.5m) from EU-backed agricultural fund

PREMIUM - 25 JUN 2025

Download our mobile app for a more immersive reading experience

Scan QR code
mobile download