The World Bank has warned that up to 2.4 million more Kenyans could fall below the poverty line in 2026, as rising fuel prices, declining remittances, and weak job creation squeeze household incomes across the country.
In its latest Kenya Economic Update, the lender revised its 2026 growth forecast down to 4.3 percent from the 4.9 percent it had projected in November, well below the government’s own 5.0 percent target. The downgrade was primarily attributed to fallout from the Middle East conflict, which has driven up global energy prices and deepened uncertainty for Kenya’s economy.
According to the report, Africa Economic Update, Kenya’s poverty rate, measured at the $3 international poverty line, could rise by 2 to 4.5 percentage points in 2026, depending on how far higher fuel prices feed through to the wider economy. That would translate into an estimated 1 million to 2.4 million additional Kenyans falling below the poverty line. Urban households, which rely heavily on public transport and purchased food rather than subsistence farming, are expected to be hit hardest.
Kenya imports more than half its petroleum products from the Middle East, and public transport carries the majority of urban commuters, meaning fuel driven fare increases translate quickly into strained household budgets. Remittances add further risk, with roughly 500,000 Kenyans employed in Gulf states; the Bank noted one of the sharpest monthly drops in remittance inflows on record in March 2026, with tens of millions of dollars potentially at stake each month.
Beyond global shocks, the World Bank flagged domestic risks including climate shocks such as droughts and floods, along with political uncertainty ahead of Kenya’s August 2027 general election, which could delay private investment and slow reform implementation.
The poverty warning follows closely on the heels of separate World Bank commentary noting that Kenya’s proposed off balance sheet infrastructure bond financing would offer only short term relief to the country’s fiscal troubles. That assessment found that despite the new funding mechanism, projected spending would still climb to Sh4.8 trillion in the coming fiscal year, while the deficit narrows only marginally, with debt levels projected to remain elevated through 2028.
The Bank noted that a $750 million budget support loan and a $500 million sustainability linked facility approved in late June are intended to help reduce Kenya’s reliance on costly domestic borrowing and support macroeconomic stability. Still, with growth slowing and poverty risks mounting, analysts say the twin warnings underscore how narrow Kenya’s fiscal and social buffers have become against external shocks.













