Kenya’s 2% GDP Investment in Science to Transform Economy

Kenya is poised to dedicate 2% of its GDP (~Sh358 billion annually) to science, research, technology, and innovation (STI), up from the current 0.8%, as guided by the STI Act, 2013.

The initiative aims to shift Kenya from a commodity-driven to a knowledge-based economy, boosting productivity, innovation, and competitiveness. Key allocations include:

30% to national research institutions for mission-oriented projects.

35% to public universities for research, labs, and innovation hubs.

15% for competitive grants supporting startups, universities, and public-private collaborations.

10% for shared national research infrastructure.

7% for commercialization, incubators, and technology transfer.

3% to foster public-private partnerships and science diplomacy.

The move targets high-skill job creation, startup growth, import substitution, climate-resilient agriculture, health innovations, and homegrown clean technologies.

The message is clear: investing in innovation is not a cost, but a long-term economic strategy that strengthens Kenya’s self-reliance, productivity, and global competitiveness.

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