Kenya Leads Africa in Private Sector Growth as Economy Gains Strong Momentum
Kenya has posted the fastest private sector growth among eight major African economies in November, according to a new S&P Global report.
The latest findings show that Kenya is now ahead of regional and continental economic giants, signaling a strong recovery and renewed business confidence in the country.
The survey revealed that Kenya recorded a Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) of 55, pushing it past Nigeria during the review period. A PMI score above 50 indicates growth in business activity, and Kenya’s numbers show a solid and broad-based expansion.
The strong performance was largely supported by an increase in sales volumes, a rise in new customer orders, competitive and more favourable pricing, and the introduction of new products across different industries.
These combined factors helped to fuel business activity and strengthen overall economic momentum.
Uganda followed closely behind Kenya with a PMI of 53.8, while Nigeria posted 53.6, and Zambia recorded 51.1. Mozambique and Ghana also showed slight improvements with PMIs of 50.8 and 50.1, respectively, reflecting modest growth across their private sectors.
In response to the encouraging report, the National Treasury said the findings reflect growing investor trust in Kenya’s economic direction.
Treasury officials noted that the country is steadily stabilising and that ongoing financial and structural reforms are now delivering visible results.
“New data from Finance in Africa shows that Kenya recorded the strongest private sector expansion among eight major African economies in November,” the Treasury stated.
“Kenya’s economy is moving with purpose, and the numbers are beginning to show it,” the statement added, emphasizing the positive trend.
This update comes just a day after the latest Stanbic Bank Kenya PMI showed similar results, confirming that Kenya’s reading is the highest the country has recorded since October 2020. The two reports highlight consistent and robust growth across multiple sectors.
Businesses credited this strong rise to more aggressive marketing campaigns, better brand visibility, and increased customer referrals in recent months—factors that have boosted overall business activity significantly.
According to Stanbic Bank, “The uplift in business activity was also one of the sharpest recorded in the survey’s history. Survey panellists attributed the steep increase in output to stronger market demand.”
However, even with the positive gains, many companies warned that rising material costs and increased taxation are still pressuring their profit margins. Although overall cost burdens have eased slightly, businesses say production expenses remain a concern.
Overall, the new numbers paint a promising picture for Kenya’s private sector, suggesting that the country’s economic reforms, market confidence, and business resilience are creating a strong path for continued growth.
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