NAIROBI — Maize prices in Kenya have maintained an upward trajectory despite increased inflows of the produce from the neighbouring countries.

Kenya imports hundreds of metric tonnes of the staple from Tanzania and Uganda every day through cross-border trade.

Data from Regional Agricultural Trade Intelligence Network (Ratin), a software run by Eastern African Grain Council that monitors cross-border trade across East Africa Community, show that an average of 1,200 metric tonnes (MT) of maize crosses into Kenya from Uganda each day.

However, these imports have not helped to bring down the cost of the produce consumed by millions of Kenyan residents. A 90kg bag of the commodity is currently being sold at between 28 US dollars and 36 dollars.

In the capital Nairobi, a 90kg bag of the produce is going for 34 dollars, up from an average of 30 dollars four months ago. Prices have been on a steady rise since April.

The cost of the produce stands at 36 dollars in the coastal city of Mombasa, which like Nairobi mainly relies on food imports from other regions. Prices are equally high in the lakeside city of Kisumu where a bag is going at 35 dollars.

Maize traders in the capital Nairobi blamed the increase to low supply.

“It’s becoming increasingly difficult to buy maize from our sources in Nakuru and Eldoret because prices have gone up. Two months ago I would buy a bag at 28 dollars but right now I’ve to part with at least 32 dollars,” Fred Kipruto, a posho mill operator in Nairobi, said on Tuesday.

Kipruto is selling a 2kg tin of maize at 1.02 dollars, up from 0.96 dollars months ago. Many Kenyans are now sourcing maize flour from mill traders like Kipruto because prices are lower.

With the cost of dry maize on the rise, millers in the East African nation have consequently pushed up the price of flour, with a 2kg packet in retail outlets going at between 0.98 and 1.1 dollars depending on the brand, up from 0.92 dollars in May.

In April, the Ministry of Agriculture in bid to tame rising maize prices announced that it would sell the produce directly to millers at 28 dollars.

Acting Cabinet Secretary Adan Mohammed blamed the rising prices on hoarding of maize and cartel-like activities in the sector, noting that the country had enough supply as farmers then held 5.1 million bags, traders 2.3 million, millers 2.4 million and the cereals board 4.1 million bags.

The move seems to have yielded little fruit if the rising cost of the commodity is anything to go by.

Kenyans consume an average of four million bags of maize per month, according to the ministry, thus, a rise in prices of the commodity hits many families hard, with inflation currently standing at 7.03 percent in July, up from 6.87 percent. Meanwhile, about a quarter of Kenya’s 1.6 trillion shilling ($16 billion) budget cannot be adequately accounted for, the country’s auditor general said, days after U.S. President Barack Obama urged the country to do more to stop graft.

Commentators said the report by Auditor General Edward Ouko’s office exposed the scale of official corruption in Kenya, east Africa’s biggest economy, which investors often cite as a hurdle to doing business there.

In the report released late on Tuesday, the auditor general said 2014/15 spending worth 450 billion shillings was not properly accounted for, demonstrating “persistent and disturbing problems in collection and accounting for revenue”.

“Corruption thrives in a big way in government offices, yet little is being done to arrest the situation,” an editorial in the Daily Nation newspaper said. “We must end the culture of misuse of state resources. Those implicated must be seized and punished.”

The report was released shortly after U.S. President Barack Obama called on Kenyans at the weekend to do more to end graft to help the economy grow faster.

“Here in Kenya, it’s time to change habits, and decisively break that cycle, because corruption holds back every aspect of economic and civil life,” said Obama, whose father was Kenyan.

Obama said the government had to show it was tackling corruption with prominent prosecutions, adding that it was an issue that also needed to be addressed elsewhere in Africa.

President Uhuru Kenyatta said the fight against graft was a priority when he took office in 2013, but critics complain that too little has been done.

Kenyatta promised in March to take personal charge of the battle against corruption and said that any official being investigated for graft must step aside.

One minister has been charged for abuse of office when he held a senior ministry post before joining the cabinet, while a second has been charged with obstructing an investigation.

Spending cited in the auditor’s report included 113 billion shillings in “unconfirmed subscriptions” to international bodies, and an unexplained overpayment of 38 billion shillings by the Transport Ministry.

The figure did not include an audit of county spending, which was done separately.

“As reported under the respective revenue statements, the discrepancies are mainly due to unexplained and unreconciled differences between revenue statement balances and the exchequer records maintained by the National Treasury,” the report said.

A spokesman for Kenyatta and the Transport ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Past Kenyan governments have made similar commitments to fight corruption, only to have the campaigns fizzle away. — Xinhua-Reuters.

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