Saturday, May 2, 2026
spot_img
HomeAgricultureFarming: Where You Invest Everything and Pray for Break-Even

Farming: Where You Invest Everything and Pray for Break-Even

NAIROBI, Kenya

By Peter Mwibanda

Farming in Kenya used to be a livelihood is now closer to a gamble—with weather, markets and policy all acting as unpredictable dealers.

Input costs have skyrocketed. Fertilizer prices are the alone salvation that can make a farmer reconsider life choices while fuel isn’t helping either.

On the other end, markets remain unreliable without proper storage or distribution.

Farmers often sell their produce at throwaway prices—because the alternative is watching their produce rot.

Government subsidies exist, at least on paper. In practice access can feel like winning a small lottery.

Then come imports that are cheaper, more competitive but quietly discouraging local production.

“You plant without certainty. You harvest without profit,” says James Murunga,a maize farmer in Trans Nzoia while summarizing the sector better than any policy document ever could.

Young people are noticing and avoiding to join the sector which is the bavkbone of the country.

Agriculture is losing both labor and optimism and at this rate, Kenya’s “breadbasket” risks becoming a museum exhibit: something we talk about nostalgically while importing dinner.

Ends.

RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisment -spot_img

Most Popular

Recent Comments

soumis on
Rhys on
WooCommerce on
WooCommerce on
WooCommerce on
WooCommerce on
WooCommerce on
Open chat
Chat On WhatsApp!
Hello
Can we help you?