East Africa is staring at a ballooning import bill for petroleum products and a long spell of imported inflation from the Russia-Ukraine war.
The economic outlook for the region has seen inflation rise for Uganda, with the consumer price index inflation expected to peak at 3.8 percent, from 3.5 percent, while in Tanzania annual inflation has eased to 4.0 percent. In Kenya, it is projected at 5.08 percent and in Rwanda 2.0 percent.
Kenya, the largest supplier of flowers to Russia after Ecuador and Colombia, will not export flowers and import grains and fertiliser from both Russia and Ukraine.
“Passenger and cargo aircraft cannot travel to the region. You cannot enter the Ukrainian airspace and largely our exports to Russia reach Moscow through Poland.
“And Poland neighbours Ukraine. Definitely, our trade with Russia will be affected by that closure of the airspace by NATO,” said Johnson Weru, Principal Secretary in the Trade Ministry.
“Russia and Ukraine are part of the region with the highest world supply of grain, including wheat and yellow maize, and fertiliser, which is also an input in the production of grains. The effect may not be immediate but it is going to be there.”
Global wheat prices have gone from $345 per tonne to $460 over the past week, according to a survey by the Kenya Association of Manufacturers.
Fertiliser prices in Kenya are also set to skyrocket above Ksh7,000 for a 50-kilo bag on fears that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will impact global supply.
Trade
Ugandan and Tanzanian trade with Russia and Ukraine have also suffered a setback. Ugandan coffee exports estimated at $7.0 million to Russia as well as wheat imports ($25.5m) have also been affected.
Flowers are the largest source of foreign exchange earnings for Kenya after tea, with production in 2020 estimated at 140,000 tonnes. The flower sector earned about Ksh108.7 billion ($983 million) in 2020, according to the Kenya Flower Council.
The Ukraine crisis has also affected trade in the East African region as prices of wheat have increased in the past few days. The crisis has also affected the importation of farm equipment and fertiliser.
“Kenya relies on both Ukraine and Russia for grain, particularly in the second half of the year, since other sources such as Argentina and Australia harvest in December,” said Phylis Wakiaga, chief executive of the Kenya Association of Manufacturers.
“Depending on the availability of wheat, prices are projected to cross $500 per tonne, which translates to $550 per tonne upon landing in Nairobi. This would then translate to approximately Ksh5,650 per 90kg bag, approximately between Ksh180 and Ksh200 for a 2kg packet and approximately Ksh60-67 for a loaf of bread. Undeniably, there is a threat to wheat supply, and this is set to affect the general population.”
Russia and Ukraine are part of the region with the highest world supply of grain including wheat and yellow maize. “In 2020, Kenya exported goods and services worth Ksh8,008 million to Russia and imported goods and services worth Ksh37,996 million, representing a trade deficit of Ksh29,988 million,” said Ms Wakiaga.
“This means that Kenya will most likely feel economic heat as a net importer if the crisis persists. Kenya is a net importer of wheat, maize and fuel from Ukraine and Russia.”
Kenya’s Agriculture Cabinet Secretary Peter Munya said that fertiliser prices in Kenya were set to skyrocket above Ksh7,000 for a 50kilo bag.
“We get most of our fertiliser from Russia and China and this war may see the price of fertiliser hit Ksh7, 000 if there will be no subsidy in place,” said Mr Munya.
Kenya’s exports to Russia and Ukraine include tobacco and its substitutes, coffee, tea, mate and spices, live trees, plants, bulbs, roots, cut flowers, edible fruits, nuts, peel of citrus fruit and melons.
Trade between East Africa and Ukraine and Russia will be affected as trade and routes face more security scrutiny and logistics intermediation.
Economists are studying the impact of this on the region’s economies.
“Inflation remains well behaved, with spare capacity and a strong currency helping to contain price pressures,” wrote Razia Khan, the Managing Director and Chief Economist at Africa and Middle East Global Research, a division of Standard Chartered Bank.
The economist gave an updated consumer price index (CPI) inflation profile to reflect higher energy prices, forecasting inflation to rise from 3.5 percent in 2021 to 3.8 percent in 2022 and 3.7 percent in 2023.
At the time, global crude oil prices were below $80 a barrel but started to rise after Russian president Vladimir Putin set conditions to deescalate the tensions with Ukraine and her North Atlantic Treaty Organisation allies, failure of which led to more confrontations, and now war.
Experts are yet to explain the extent to which Russia’s military invasion of Ukraine will impact the region’s economies, but what is clear is that it will increase inflationary pressures on energy, food and other products.
After Russian tanks crossed into Ukrainian territory, global benchmark Brent crude crossed the $100 mark per barrel, for the first time since 2014, and this week touched $110, as experts say the prices are not about to retreat.
Closer to home, oil marketing companies say their finances were already constrained by tensions between Russia and Ukraine and feared the worst if the two European countries went to war – a reality that has come to pass when Putin ordered his troops over the border.
Boniface Kipchirchir, the Head of Operations at Stabex International Uganda, explains that Platts – the price benchmark for the oil industry – rose from an average of $648 per metric tonne of crude in December 2021 to $820 per tonne in February.
In liberal EAC markets like Uganda, which has seen fuel prices skyrocketing over the last two months, the rise in the international benchmark translates into an increase by over Ush600 (15 cents) per litre at the pump. By The East African