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Kenya private sector activity shrinks for first time since August 2025

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The Stanbic Kenya survey said the only sector that experienced expansion ​in March was wholesale and retail.

Kenya’s private sector activity contracted in March for the first time since August, partly due to the war ​in the Middle East, with only the wholesale and ‌retail sectors experiencing expansion, a survey showed this  Tuesday.

The Stanbic Bank Kenya Purchasing Managers’ Index fell to 47.7 in March from 50.4 ​in February, the survey showed. Readings above 50.0 indicate ​growth in business activity, while those below that signal ⁠contraction. It is the first time since August 2025 ​that the index has gone below 50.

“The slowdown in private ​sector activity was broadly demand-led, with many firms pointing to constrained customer spending, reduced cash circulation and tighter household budgets,” Stanbic Bank said ​in comments accompanying the survey.

“The Middle East war also resulted ​in more cautious spending patterns among some firms, as well as logistics ‌constraints ⁠to customer deliveries and higher prices for fuel and transport.”

President William Ruto said on March 30 that the government was assessing the war’s impact on prices and that measures were ​being put ​in place to ⁠ensure Kenya retains sufficient supplies.

The Stanbic Kenya survey said the only sector that experienced expansion ​in March was wholesale and retail.

“Output and ​new orders ⁠declined in most sectors, implying that businesses expect to be constrained by the disruptions from geopolitical tensions,” Stanbic Bank Economist ⁠Christopher Legilisho ​said.

The Finance Ministry forecasts the economy ​grew by 5.0% in 2025 and will expand 5.3% this year, up from ​4.7% in 2024.

–Reuters–