Kenya Kwanza must review the tax regime for hustlers to thrive
Houghton Irungu
By
Irungu Houghton
| Nov 29, 2025
Oxfam’s new data shows Kenya is far from the Kenya Kwanza’s 2022 promise of a fair and prosperous nation. The 2025 Inequality Report offers policies for those leaders still committed to that vision.
Last week’s State of the Nation Address confirmed the government has no strategy to reduce the debt-driven erosion of essential services or lift most households from poverty. Promises of universal healthcare and affordable housing remain stalled by funding gaps and controversy. Over-taxation is pushing hustlers underground. Instead of bottom-up transformation, the economy seems to have bottomed out.
Oxfam’s 2025 ‘Inequality Crisis’ report demonstrates wealth is concentrating. 125 Kenyans own more than 77 per cent of the population. Lazy and regressive taxes like VAT are hitting low-income earners hardest. Inflation is 27 per cent higher for them than higher income earners. Food insecurity is up 71 per cent, food costs have risen 50 per cent in the last five years and women earn Sh65 for every Sh100 men earn.
Universal health care remains a pipedream. The Social Health Insurance Fund remains unaffordable for most, only 8 per cent of us contribute and fewer benefit. Only the nation’s global creditors seem to have guarantees. Despite our hardships, only our international creditors seem assured of regular payments.
Despite the comprehensive implementation of the Competency-Based Education, funding for public education, a core equality accelerator, has plummeted. Today, our 10 million learners make do with 18 per cent less than the Kibaki/NARC government provided back in 2003. Consequently, the poorest children get five years less of schooling than the richest.
Speaking at the Kiota School prize-giving ceremony this week, I was struck by implications of a good education for citizenship and the right to equality. Not just academic, but civic, financial, emotional literacy starts in our homes and schools. We learn fairness sharing toys, food and space. We learn responsibility by helping, and empathy by supporting others in need. Our homes and classrooms are where we learn to use the internet safely and creatively.
Deepening inequality is splitting the nation’s households and schools into two extremes. Those who have access to security, economic opportunities and digital technology, and those crashing under the weight of regressive taxation and economic policies.
Fortunately, Oxfam’s report goes beyond criticism. It offers practical policy solutions that could rescue Kenya Kwanza’s vision if implemented.
As the national administration turns to the 2026/7 budget, it needs to raise education, health and social protection budget lines by 20, 15 and 1 per cent of GDP respectively. Rather than exporting Kenyans to semi-slavery, xenophobic or racist economies, can Kenya Kwanza expand public works programmes and increase paid maternity leave to 26 weeks. To pay for this, the state must transform the tax regime. Apply a 14 per cent wealth tax on dollar millionaires and progressive bands on the very wealthy. Both state and non-state actors must advocate for debt relief before the inevitable default. The IMF and the World must start to factor in inequality indicators as valid macro-economic triggers.
Corruption and selective action on the corrupt must stop. Now the Auditor General has told us there are Sh11 billion irregular transactions on the e-Citizen platform and the courts have ruled the State must stop using it, will they?
Must we wait until the greed of the National Assembly outstrips the patience of the Executive before it stops the culture of “bribes for bills”?
Youth leaders Mercy Tarus and Morara Kebaso vividly described the extent of the rot in 2024. Grace Njoki and Nelson Amenya blew the whistle on a failing health system and massive dubious procurement deals.
Rose Tunguru Njeri created a non-violent way for leaders to hear from their electorate and not repeat that disastrous 2024 Finance Bill.
It is the system that has been built to serve a few who fuelled young citizens’ anger over the past year. Will Kenya Kwanza act on Oxfam’s policy lifeline or repeat last year’s crisis? The clock is ticking.