Kenya’s government has presented its 2025/26 national budget amid lingering political sensitivities and economic uncertainty, one year after the controversial 2024 Finance Bill sparked mass protests and widespread public outrage.
The new fiscal plan reflects a careful pivot from politically volatile tax measures toward broader structural reforms aimed at stabilizing debt and restoring investor confidence.
Finance Minister John Mbadi announced the KSh 4.2 trillion budget in Nairobi on Thursday, stressing fiscal discipline while avoiding direct taxation on everyday consumer goods, a key flashpoint during last year’s #RejectFinanceBill demonstrations. The revised approach focuses instead on widening the tax base, reducing tax exemptions for businesses, and strengthening enforcement through the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA).
“This is a budget for stability, discipline, and growth,” Mbadi said during his address. “We are protecting the livelihoods of Kenyans while ensuring our macroeconomic fundamentals remain sound.”
The government aims to reduce its fiscal deficit to 4.5% of GDP, down from 5.1% in the previous cycle. This goal aligns with ongoing efforts to renegotiate a stalled loan package with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), whose disbursements were delayed earlier in the year due to missed performance targets.
Market analysts remain cautiously optimistic. “The fiscal tightening is necessary, but the budget’s success hinges on political stability and cooperation with multilateral partners,” said Isaac Kibe, a Nairobi-based economist. “Kenya’s credibility in international markets depends on consistency and reform delivery.”
Despite these intentions, the budget introduces tighter regulations for small and medium enterprises (SMEs), which may experience increased pressure through compliance reforms and reduced tax waivers.
While large corporate entities are also targeted under new auditing mechanisms, smaller firms face disproportionate exposure to administrative and financial constraints.
Meanwhile, rising public debt remains a significant concern. Interest payments have surpassed allocations to both the health and education sectors, highlighting the mounting cost of external borrowing.
With total debt stock approaching 70% of GDP, the World Bank has revised Kenya’s 2025 growth outlook downward to 4.5% from an earlier 5.0% forecast.
From a policy standpoint, the Treasury is betting on public cooperation and institutional efficiency. However, tensions persist in civil society, especially in light of recent incidents involving the arrest of online activists and developers, which have raised concerns about freedom of expression and state accountability.
Investor confidence remains mixed. “This is a politically strategic budget designed to avoid another backlash, but the real test will be in execution,” said Lydia Mwangi, senior consultant at Eastbridge Advisors. “International lenders and local markets alike are watching Kenya’s next steps carefully.”
In the short term, the budget offers a reprieve from tax-heavy policy shocks for consumers, but structural challenges, ballooning debt, sluggish compliance rates, and underfunded social programs continue to loom large.
As Kenya charts its course through a fragile economic recovery, the government’s ability to sustain reform momentum without reigniting public anger may define the nation’s fiscal trajectory for the coming years.