Uhuru finally reveals the budget to shape his expensive legacy

Details have emerged of President Kenyatta’s strategy to secure his legacy-defining Big Four agenda.

A Treasury dossier obtained yesterday by the Star outlined the government’s plan to roll out multi-billion projects, in only four years.

Critics have repeatedly claimed the Jubilee administration could be biting more than it can chew.

The Big Four is grounded on food security, affordable housing, manufacturing, and universal healthcare.

The 2019 Draft Budget Policy Statement proposes to spend Sh5.6 trillion in financial years 2019/20 – 2021/22.

Of this, Sh2.01 trillion will be spent on development to “accelerate growth, create jobs, and reduce poverty.”

On housing, Kenyatta intends to construct 500,000 homes in five lots in four years.

Phase one will see 1,640 units built at Park Road, Makongeni (20,000), Shauri Moyo (5,300), Starehe (3,500) and Mavoko (5,500).

Jubilee plans to build 15,000 units by empowering housing associations, 48,000 by counties, and 78,700 by Nairobi and Mombasa counties.

In phase two, counties should put up 45,000 units, Nairobi regeneration (20,000), police (10,000), and 20,000 others at the NSSF land in Mavoko. Private developers will be encouraged via incentives to put up 20,000 units in the same period.

Counties are further expected to construct 45,000 units in the third phase while 20,000 more through redevelopment of Nairobi’s old estates. The government targets 10,000 units under the Police Housing Plan, 20,000 at the NSSF Mavoko land; 10,000 by cooperatives, and 20,000 by private developers.

Other 220,000 units will be put up in the fourth and fifth phase through cooperatives, private developers, and redevelopment of Nairobi’s old estates.

A deal between the government and the United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOP) should deliver 100,000 affordable units.

“Already, the government has identified appropriate sites for the housing programme and availed 7,000 acres of land.”

Gatundu South MP Moses Kuria on February 1 said he was pessimistic the project is achievable.

“To build 500,000 houses within the 42 months left, we need to build 11,905 houses per month from today going forward,” the legislator said.

To actualise the ambitious plan, the government established the Kenya Mortgage Refinance Company (KMRC) to resolve funding constraints.

KMRC will provide long-term funding to financial institutions, “thereby increasing the availability and affordability of mortgage loans to Kenyans.”

The government has also set up the National Housing Development Fund which will mobilise capital for the affordable housing project.

The infrastructure sector has been allocated Sh411.3 billion, Sh417.3 billion and Sh424.3 billion for the three financial years.

Part of the money will be spent to construct of 8,245 km of roads, 150 bridges, rehabilitate 763km of roads, and maintain others stretching over 114,000 kilometres.

Uhuru also plans to complete the first three berths at Lamu Port; SGR Phase 2A; Phase 2 of the Second Container Terminal at Mombasa Port, and expand airstrips. “

“The sector also targets to generate 649.5MW of power; construct 1,432km of electricity transmission lines; connect 2 million new customers to electricity, install 5,398 new transformers; drill 270 oil wells, produce 600,000 barrels of oil, and distribute 20,482 metric tonnes of oil and gas.”

and vulnerable groups, persons with mental illness, secondary school students and the informal sector.

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