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Alarm over shortage and cost of maize flour

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By  LUCAS BARASA and OLIVER MATHENGE
Posted  Sunday, November 23  2008 at  22:39

In Summary

  • Price of staple meal has shot up in the last one week and is too high for the poor

An acute shortage of maize flour is looming in the country after its cost doubled in the past one week and shops started rationing the commodity.

On Sunday, shortage of the staple, retailing at Sh120 per packet, started to bite across the country.

In December last year, a two-kilogramme packet of maize flour cost Sh48. Last week, the packet was being sold for between Sh80 and Sh85.

Prime Minister Raila Odinga on Sunday blamed the shortage on poor harvests and high food prices in the international market.

The minister for Agriculture, Mr William Ruto, said the shortage was artificial and blamed millers whom he accused of refusing to buy maize directly from farmers.

However, Kenya Association of Manufacturers chairman Vimal Shah said there was no maize in the market. He asked the Government to allow millers to import maize to reduce the shortage.

Even as the Government and millers differed over who was to blame for the shortage, a consumer organisation has called for the introduction of price controls to ensure that the flour, which is used to make the staple ugali meal, remains affordable to the poor.

About 46 per cent of Kenyans live on less than Sh140 a day, which means they can barely afford to buy a packet of maize flour.

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“We know it is a free market economy, but there should be a mechanism to ensure consumers do not continue to be exploited,” said Ms Dorcas Kamunya of Consumer Information Network.

Rationing

In Nairobi, some supermarkets were rationing the number of packets that their customers could buy. In one supermarket, customers were not allowed to buy more than five packets.

In other parts of the country, consumers rushed to buy and stock the staple in anticipation of a further shortage.

Major outlets in the city told the Nation that there has been a low supply of the product over the last few days.

A spot-check at Nakumatt Supermarket branches in Nairobi revealed that the largest chain-store in the country had no maize flour.

Nakumatt Holdings operations director Thiagarajan Ramamurthy said millers who supply the chain had no maize to produce flour. He, however, said some of the millers had promised to make some deliveries on Monday.

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Add a comment (31 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by Nyankieya

    Trust me I know there are Cartels

    Posted  November 25, 2008 09:59 AM  
  2. Submitted by luapngugs

    if this is our main meal,then do u expect us to enjoy the so coming x-mas holiday?

    Posted  November 25, 2008 09:15 AM  
  3. Submitted by areke clement

    Where is President Kibaki? What is he saying? What is he doing about the quagmire facing middle class and poverty ridden Kenyans. Is he familiar with the term "executive order", as Obama puts it? MPs rejecting taxation,and SIR, you don't say a thing! Kenyans have been economically RIPPED to the bottom, you are an ECONOMIST! You still don't say a thing SIR! Us kenyans abroad are deeply DISAPPOINTED. Can the Head of State show us his economic-skills endowment.

    Posted  November 24, 2008 10:57 PM  
  4. Submitted by Eddy Boy

    Kenyans,dont you realise that we have to part alot of our money so that we can feed a pack of 43 hungry wolves and their numerous assistants plus their technical wing,and new born babies in the department,plus a further 100+ thieves in the house??We let this happen,look at the pricing of flour from Dec and you'll realise that the government coffers are running dry every month and who else is better equiped to restock it????ME AND YOU

    Posted  November 24, 2008 10:33 PM  
  5. Submitted by syindumyaki

    Ruto should not be heading the min of Agri esp at such a time as this when he has enough issues. Is he gona think abt the hague(nightmare) or a starving child (secondary issue)? Mr uhuru, you have lots of ideas on how to sort this one out becoz u frequent WTO meetings, advise us whether to import maize or is some one being protectionist of the agric sector? we need answers.

    Posted  November 24, 2008 10:05 PM  

See all 31 comments