Uganda’s Private Sector Extends Growth Streak to One Year

Uganda’s private sector remained in expansion territory in January, marking 12 consecutive months of growth, according to the latest Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI).

The Stanbic Bank Uganda PMI eased to 52.6 in January, down from 54.0 in December, but stayed above the 50-point threshold that separates expansion from contraction.

📊 What the PMI Shows

The PMI, compiled by S&P Global, highlighted:

Continued growth in new orders and business activity

Expansion across all five monitored sectors

The 12th straight month of job creation

Rising optimism about the year ahead

However, some firms reported disruptions linked to the election period, which slowed certain operations.

👥 Employment & Sector Trends

Companies hired additional staff for the 12th consecutive month

Many new hires were permanent

Agriculture was the only sector to record a drop in staffing

Increased hiring pushed up wage costs, with staff cost inflation resuming after a brief decline in December.

📦 Supply Chains & Costs

Businesses ramped up:

Input purchases

Inventory levels

This suggests firms are preparing for stronger output in coming months.

However:

Supplier delivery times lengthened for the third consecutive month

Delays were partly attributed to election-related disruptions

Input costs rose due to higher purchase prices, wages, and utilities

Despite rising costs, 97% of firms reported no change in input or output prices since December — indicating limited pass-through to consumers so far.

🔮 Business Confidence Remains Strong

Around three-quarters of surveyed firms expressed optimism about the year ahead, expecting:

Improved customer demand

Post-election economic normalization

Sustained recovery momentum

🏦 Why This Matters

The PMI reading suggests that Uganda’s private sector — a key driver of economic activity — is maintaining resilience despite temporary election-related headwinds.

Sustained expansion over a full year indicates:

Strengthening domestic demand

Stable macroeconomic conditions

Gradual business recovery

If the post-election period stabilizes quickly, growth momentum could accelerate further in early 2026.

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