Kenya’s economy is on the mend and the country is unlikely to need further assistance from the International Monetary Fund, according to the head of President William Ruto’s economic council.
Can IMF's one-size-fits-all approach meet the diverse economic needs of Kenya? Find out why it is ineffective, and discover ...
Kenya faces an escalating debt crisis, and the IMF has warned of a heightened risk of loan default. The country’s public debt ...
The private sector depends on loans from banks to fund new investments and support consumption—key ingredients in expanding ...
Kenya’s infrastructure is at a critical turning point. The High Court’s suspension of the Adani Power project has cast a ...
KBA chairman said banks have recently begun cutting interest rates but the relief is yet to feed into the overall weighted ...
Poverty and climate change are two of the most pressing challenges confronting Africa today. The continent continues to ...
THERE are ways in which Kemi Badenoch’s advent as Britain’s opposition leader, at the helm of the Conservative Party, can be ...
The first lesson of economics is scarcity: there is never enough of anything to fully satisfy all those who want it. The ...
True safety goes beyond statistics—it’s felt in everyday life. With Gallup’s Global Safety Report 2024 as our guide, we’ve ...
The funds will primarily go toward settling loans provided by Ethiopia’s largest bank to several state-owned companies, including Ethiopia Electric Power, Ethiopian Sugar Corp, and Ethiopia Railway ...