The Nation (Nairobi)

Kenya: Poverty Holds Back Growth Plan

Nairobi — Poverty eradication remains the country's biggest challenge in meeting the millennium development goals by the 2015 deadline, the latest UN assessment report says.

The United Nations Development Programme report says the poverty level had only declined by 10 per cent in the past decade.

The major decline was recorded between 2000 and 2006, when the poverty rate fell from 56 per cent to 46. Since then, no marked change has been recorded, despite the high population increase.

"Poverty is still at 2006 levels. While a significant amount of money and resources is required for basic social services, such as schools, hospitals and roads, a similar increase in capital expenditure is not being made," the report entitled Road to 2015: driving the MDGs says.

The document, however, praises the government for introducing free primary education, stating the enrolment rates in primary schools had increased significantly, reaching 86.5 per cent in 2006.

Despite the achievement, the recently launched 2009 census report showed the government still had a challenge in increasing access.

According to the census, six million Kenyans are not in school.

Of the grand total, 3.9 million are children of school-going age and 2.1 million are adults who have never sat in a classroom. The government has promised to increase access to 100 per cent by 2015.

The UNDP report praises the government for increasing immunisation coverage for infants and children to over 80 per cent, adding that public health centres and drugs accessibility had also improved.

"About 68 per cent of children under-five years old are receiving bed nets to protect them against mosquitoes (which cause malaria)," it adds.

On maternal health, the report says "ring-fencing" or the strict adherence to agreed budgetary allocations to the health sector, had helped improve maternal health.

"The proportion of births attended by skilled health personnel increased from 42 per cent in 2003 to 56 per cent by 2007," it says.

Though the government had made efforts in reducing HIV/Aids prevalence rates in the past decade, the report says women still bore the heaviest brunt of the disease.

Citing 2007 studies, the document says females still have a higher prevalence of 6.7 per cent compared to 3.5 per cent for males.

Tagged: East Africa, Kenya

Copyright © 2010 The Nation. All rights reserved. Distributed by AllAfrica Global Media (allAfrica.com). To contact the copyright holder directly for corrections — or for permission to republish or make other authorized use of this material, click here.

AllAfrica aggregates and indexes content from over 130 African news organizations, plus more than 200 other sources, who are responsible for their own reporting and views. Articles and commentaries that identify allAfrica.com as the publisher are produced or commissioned by AllAfrica.

Comments 1 to 1 of 1 Post a comment

  • chokora
    Sep 8 2010, 00:27

    " ..Poverty Holds Back Growth .."

    OH! Thanks a lot, imperial plunderers' " Nation", we didn't know that.

    Now we know why we are not growing .. We, the poor masses of the failed state of Kenya (in which Kibaki thinks that he is doing such as superlative job of growth that he steals an election and would award himself - or rather loot the people' treasury for - more than any leader in the free world ..)

    But, just a moment, are you suggesting that Kibaki has amply demonstrated (by his failures) that he is as clueless a bumpkin in (economic) growth matters as the rest of us? Indeed, he parades around as a very educated man (with an introductory certificate from an unrated college in Museveni's Uganda) and denigrates the rest of us - yet he is essentially worthless and indeed, an inhibiting factor in the peoples' quest for security and happiness.

    We may as well include Kibaki in his favorite category of "waJinga, waShenzi, mavi ya kuku."

    Don't you agree?