Kenya’s PMI Hits 10-Month High in March 2025

Kenya's private sector expands at fastest rate in 10 months, led by services and retail. Manufacturing remains a concern amid soft demand.

Kenya’s private sector expands at fastest rate in 10 months, led by services and retail. Manufacturing remains a concern amid soft demand.

Kenya’s Private Sector Grows at Fastest Pace in 10 Months

NAIROBI, Kenya – March 2025Kenya’s private sector activity surged to its highest level since May 2024, according to the Stanbic Bank Kenya Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI). The PMI rose to 51.7 in March, up from 50.6 in February, indicating an accelerating expansion in business activity.

Any PMI reading above 50.0 signals economic growth.

“There were robust expansions in output and new orders across several sectors such as services, wholesale, and retail,” said Christopher Legilisho, economist at Stanbic Bank Kenya. “Only the manufacturing sector exhibited soft demand.”

📌 Related: Understanding Kenya’s PMI and Its Economic Implications


🔼 What’s Driving the Growth?

Key sectors fueling the PMI rise include:

  • Services
  • Wholesale trade
  • Retail

These industries showed strong client demand, benefiting from improving consumer confidence and easing inflation.

The expansion reflects increasing business optimism and improving credit conditions, which have been critical in stimulating economic activity since late 2024.

📌 Explore: Kenya’s Economic Forecast: 2025–2026


📉 Manufacturing Remains a Weak Spot

Despite the upbeat momentum in most sectors, manufacturing continues to contract due to:

  • Currency volatility
  • High import costs
  • Supply chain challenges

“Persistent cost pressures and weak external demand are weighing on industrial output,” analysts note.

This underperformance raises concerns about Kenya’s ability to achieve broad-based industrialization as envisioned in the Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda (BETA).

📌 Read: Why Kenya’s Manufacturing Sector Is Lagging


🔮 Stronger Economic Growth Projected

The positive PMI data aligns with the Treasury’s GDP growth forecast:

  • 5.3% GDP growth expected in 2025 and 2026
  • Up from an estimated 4.6% growth in 2024

This projected growth is driven by:

Resilient domestic demand
Improved lending conditions
Stabilizing inflation

📌 Related: Kenya’s Fiscal Strategy 2025


📌 What to Watch Moving Forward

As Kenya eyes sustained recovery, private sector activity will remain a key barometer of economic health. Policymakers are expected to:

Deepen access to credit for SMEs and startups

Monitor inflation and exchange rate volatility

Support manufacturing competitiveness

By Charles Wachira

Charles Wachira, Managing Editor of businessworld, has disproportionately worked as a foreign correspondent in Nairobi, Kenya. Formerly an East Africa correspondent with bloomberg, covering the business beat he has since been published by a legion of other authoritative global news platforms including Global Finance Magazine, Toward Freedom, Earth Island Journal, and Dialogue. earth and so on. He is also a co-author of, Success to Significance, a biography of pre-eminent global industrialist and renowned philanthropist Dr. Manu Chandaraia. He’s an alumnus of the University of Nairobi and Nairobi School.

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