Struggling Kenyans headache for Kenyatta as polls near

epa06051808 Kenya's ruling Jubilee party leader and incumbent President Uhuru Kenyatta addresses the crowd during the launch of the party's manifesto ahead of the August 2017 general elections in Nairobi, Kenya, 26 June 2017. The launching of the manifesto comes at a time when both Kenya's opposition and the ruling Jubilee party gear up on their campaigns ahead of the general elections scheduled to take place on 08 August 2017.  EPA/DAI KUROKAWA

Bloomberg

About two-thirds of Kenyans say they’re worse off economically, expressing concerns that should “worry” President Uhuru Kenyatta as he seeks re-election in a vote in three weeks, pollsters Ipsos and US-based John Zogby said.
Almost half of the population cite the cost of living and hunger as the most serious problems they grapple with daily, followed by unemployment, Nairobi-based Ipsos said in an opinion poll published on Wednesday. The survey found that voters in the western Nyanza region, an opposition stronghold, are the most aggrieved about the high cost of basic necessities, while residents of eastern counties complained mainly of hunger.
“To the extent that Kenyans seize the opportunity of an election to register their satisfaction or distress with regard to their everyday conditions, those seeking popular support will ignore the kinds of findings presented above at their peril,” Ipsos said. Current economic conditions and corruption weigh on Kenyatta’s chances of re-election, said Zogby, who conducted an opinion poll on behalf of the opposition National Super Alliance. About 56 percent of Kenyans are concerned about unemployment, while more than 70 percent think corruption has worsened during the past four years, Zogby said in an emailed statement. About 88 percent of 2,983 Kenyans surveyed link corruption to difficulties they experience in daily life, and a similar number cite expensive living among their challenges.
“If I were the president, I’d be worried,” Zogby said. “No poll is perfect, but for those who find it convenient to dismiss these results, they are engaging in wishful thinking.”
A drought that’s spanned three harvests has cut farm output in Kenya, leading to shortages of foods including the staple corn, sugar and milk. That’s driven the inflation rate to the highest level in five years, squeezing families in an economy where almost half of the population survives on less than $2 a day.
The government said in May it planned to spend 6 billion shillings ($58 million) subsidizing corn prices that have surged because of the deficit. Half of the 2,209 people surveyed by Ipsos said they hadn’t seen any change in prices.
Corn remains the preferred food in Kenya and the government’s popularity “is likely to suffer if the constant demand for it remains unsatisfied,” Ipsos said.

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