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Strengthening accountability to break Kenya’s corruption cycle

Malcom Rutere by Malcom Rutere
February 13, 2026
in Economy, Opinion
Reading Time: 2 mins read

Kenya’s corruption challenge is no longer simply a matter of perception; it has evolved into a structural economic and governance issue with measurable consequences. Recent survey findings highlighted by global assessments such as those by Transparency International, suggest that corruption remains deeply entrenched. The concern is not just that corruption exists, but that it risks becoming normalized and woven into everyday interactions between citizens, businesses and the state.

When corruption becomes predictable, it stops being shocking and starts being priced in. For investors, this translates into higher risk premiums, increased compliance costs, and cautious long-term commitments. For citizens, it shows up in inflated project costs, incomplete infrastructure, underfunded health systems, and uneven service delivery. Ultimately, corruption acts as an invisible tax, one that disproportionately burdens the most vulnerable while slowing national development.

Weak accountability sits at the heart of the problem. Kenya has established anti-corruption bodies and legal frameworks, yet enforcement remains inconsistent. High-profile investigations often generate public attention, but prolonged judicial processes and limited convictions dilute deterrence. When consequences are uncertain, corruption becomes less of a gamble and more of a calculated risk. The absence of predictable punishment undermines trust not only in institutions but also in the broader social contract.

Public procurement reform is equally critical. Procurement remains one of the most vulnerable channels for resource leakage. Digitizing procurement systems end-to-end, publishing contract details, and disclosing beneficial ownership information would reduce opacity and limit opportunities for manipulation. Transparency, when embedded into digital systems, reduces discretion and makes irregularities easier to detect.

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Whistleblower protection must also be strengthened. Many corruption cases begin with insider information, yet fear of retaliation often silences potential reporters. Effective legal safeguards, confidentiality mechanisms, and clear reporting channels can empower individuals to act without jeopardizing their careers or safety. Accountability flourishes when individuals feel protected rather than exposed.

Asset recovery efforts should also be made more visible. Recovering stolen funds sends an important signal, but public confidence grows when recovered resources are clearly redirected toward tangible community projects. Linking recovered assets to schools, healthcare facilities, or infrastructure improvements reinforces the practical benefits of accountability.

Ultimately, breaking Kenya’s corruption cycle is both an economic necessity and a governance imperative. With rising debt pressures, youth unemployment, and heightened investor scrutiny, accountability reform is no longer optional. Embedding transparency, enforcement certainty, and institutional independence into governance structures can gradually shift incentives and restore trust. The real turning point will come not from rhetoric, but from sustained, predictable accountability that reshapes how power is exercised and how public resources are managed.

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