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Kenya Export Promotion and Branding Agency CEO Peter Biwott (left) with Trade PS Chris Kiptoo at a past event. PHOTO | DIANA NGILA | NMG |
Demand
for Kenyan products has slumped in Rwanda and Burundi amid competition from
China, India and Saudi Arabia, a study by Kenya Export Promotion and Branding
Agency (Keproba) shows.
Kenya,
which mainly exports iron sheets, steel, oils, perfumes, paints, paper and
cigarettes to the two landlocked States, has recorded slow export growth as
other players come into their turf.
Rwanda
and Burundi officially joined the East African Community trading bloc in 2009
where they are able to trade with Kenyans without tariff and import quota
restrictions.
“There
is a notable trend in the abandonment of the Kenyan brands in Rwanda and
Burundi due to increasing prices, unavailability of products, competition from
substitute products and counterfeiting,” says the study released yesterday.
Kenya
commands three percent share of the import market in the two countries, valued
at about Sh6.5 billion in Burundi and Sh17.8 billion for Rwanda.
“Kenya needs to improve competiveness of
its export commodities, better the export penetration strategies to grow its
market share vis-à-vis competing countries,” the agency chief executive Peter
Biwott told the Business Daily.
The research shows that Burundian household
spends mostly on household items such as clothes and footwear (32 percent),
cereals (18 percent), meat and groceries (14 percent, oils (10 percent) and
cooking energy (five percent).
Similarly, Rwandan households’ budget is
dominated by clothes and footwear (up to 34 percent) and food items (cereals,
groceries, mea, cooking oil, and dairy) making up to 52 percent of the budget.
“New opportunities for Kenyan exports
products should target household items such as clothes, cereals (rice) and
groceries,” states the study, adding opportunities also exist to deepen market
penetration for confectionery, footwear, toiletries and plastics.
“The survey of consumers in Burundi
established that price was the most important driver influencing their purchase
decision for most products,” says the agency.
Kenya can compete with local industries in
Rwanda, where consumers value quality, to get a share of the 78 percent
domestic supply, it said.
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