Tanzania topples SA as Kenya’s top source of imports in Africa

Basically, Tanzania now feeds Kenya.
Samia must be doing something right while Kenyans are busy singing to white Jesus in Churches expecting miracles.


Tanzania has become the largest source market for Kenya on the continent after overtaking South Africa, partly on the back of increased orders of maize and rice by millers.

Official trade statistics show expenditure on goods trucked from Tanzania nearly doubled last year to Sh54.47 billion from Sh27.88 billion the year before.
The 95.38 percent, or Sh26.59 billion, bump in imports catapulted Tanzania to the top position in Africa after orders from South Africa fell 3.72 percent to Sh44.08 billion, according to data collated by the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS).

“Imports from Tanzania nearly doubled from Sh27.9 billion in 2020 to Sh54.5 billion in 2021 partly attributable to increase in imports of maize and rice from this country,” KNBS analysts wrote in the Economic Survey 2022.

Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta and his counterpart Samia Suluhu in May last year pledged to end persistent strained trade relations between the two largest economies in the six-nation East African Community bloc which have, for years, hindered the smooth flow of goods and services.
Ms Suluhu’s visit to Nairobi touched off a series of joint trade meetings aimed at flattening barriers to the flow of goods.

For example, Trade minister Betty Maina and her Tanzanian counterpart Prof Kitila Mkumbo led delegations to a four-day meeting in Arusha — the headquarters of the EAC secretariat — weeks after the two presidents met in Nairobi to address unresolved trade disputes.

The KNBS data shows that Kenya’s exports to Tanzania also jumped 43.12 percent to Sh45.56 billion, titling the trade balance in favour of Dar es Salaam to the tune of Sh8.91 billion.

Kenyan traders turned to Tanzania as a source market for unmilled maize in a year domestic production fell 12.8 percent to 36.7 million bags in 2021 from 42.1 million bags in the prior year.

The KNBS data shows the cost of importing a tonne of maize into the country increased to an average of Sh28,260 last year from Sh27,279.6 the year before — translating to an average of Sh2,543 per 90-kilogramme bag.

Maize imports jumped 77.9 percent last year to 486,525.0 tonnes, marking the highest volumes since 529,558.3 tonnes in 2018 when the country was emerging from a biting drought a year earlier that had prompted millers and traders to make orders from as far as Mexico.

The maize imports, where Tanzania was one of the main markets, cost Sh13.75 billion from Sh7.46 billion, the biggest expenditure since Sh40.265.0 billion in 2017, according to the KNBS.

That is very good. Why bother producing maize here at unsustainable cost yet Tz can produce the same cheaply?

Our farmers should now concentrate on high value crops like coffee that we can export for dollars

Mama samia amefanya kazi buana

Export raw coffee and buy them back at higher price .

Yes.
Even if you don’t export, you will still buy

The foundation was laid by the Late Maghufuli.

Wewe Wacha kutusumbua.
Do you know what Tanzania imports specifically AgriProduce have done to us.
Maize and Onions for example?

Why do people still regurgitate arguments za 90s?
Everyone buys imported coffee. We may produce excellent coffee, but some people will still want Nescafe or Nestle or whatever bland brand name. The total import cost is less than 5 % of the export value.

In 2020, Kenya imported $9.68M in Coffee, becoming the 90th largest importer of Coffee in the world.
In 2020, Kenya exported $229M in Coffee, making it the 25th largest exporter of Coffee in the world.

We could still do better. Admittedly. But not by blind arguments, rather by targeted marketing and increased production.

Why don’t you plant yours?
Your farming is expensive in labour and inputs - Samia for example subsidises her farmers with fertilizer while Kenya does zero

If you are not a mega-farmer, there’s no money in Maize. I rarely agree with William Ruto, but telling farmers to not bother with maize, even though I know he did it for ulterior motives, was the right call.
Onions still has money, despite the challenges.

Wasapere ndio wanalima Tanzania. I have a friend who went to tz. He tells me ukichukua work permit. As an investor ukitaka land kama 1000 hectares gava ina kupea ulime. Huku kenya getting land for farming ndio shida.

I was told something similar, sijawahi verify. Though I was given a slightly different version. If you agree with the local community, then the government allocates you land to farm.
One thing I can confirm without heresay (tembea Oloitokitok, Kimana ujionee) contrary to popular opinion that Tanzanians are lazy, damn those motherfuckers can farm. Mt. Kilimanjaro areas, the Tanzanian Maasai’s come to your farm and do everything in exchange for a share of your profits.

Government ndio hukupea. Land is owned by the government.

If fertilizer is 6k per bag who will farm maize

Kenya’s arable land is so small compared to what the Tanzanians have. if we will be self-sustainable in food production, we have to heavily invest in irrigation.

Either way, attempting commercial crop farming without irrigation is like hitting on a girl when you know you have a limp dick and you don’t carry sildenafil.

we don’t have enough water to drink let alone irrigate

Do you know how much water River Athi/Galana dumps into the indian ocean every single day?
Just that one river alone has the capacity to irrigate millions of acres.

Water is harvested in dams from the rain and rivers. It is all about planning and implementing without cutting corners. Very possible to farm in the semi-arid areas of Ukambani, coast, and south-rift.

Sugoi man alikula pesa zote za Dam