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US-China rivalry to shape Kenya’s foreign policy in 2019

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US-China rivalry to shape Kenya’s foreign policy in 2019
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Kenya and other African states may be able to leverage financing from multiple partners as the US and China rivalry between the two large economies intensifies and comes to the continent in 2019. This is one of the key findings of RiskMap2019, a publication forecasting political and security risk for business leaders and policy makers across the world, by specialist global risk consultancy, Control Risks.

RiskMap2019 predicts that the US-China rivalry that begun in 2018 with the onset of the tariff wars will escalate this year with Kenya and other African countries set to become new battle grounds as both nations increase efforts to maintain their influence on the continent.

US-China rivalry to shape Kenya’s foreign policy in 2019
CEO Control Risks Richard Fenning addresses the media during the launch of RiskMap 2019 at Capital club Nairobi

“So far, the US-China rivalry that dominated global headlines in 2018 has played out less visibly in Africa than on other continents. Support for China or the US has not emerged as a defining issue in African politics, with most countries keen to pursue closer ties and seek financing from both sides rather than falling neatly on one camp. In 2019 we might see this changing,” said Senior Partner, Daniel Heal for Control Risks, East Africa.

US-China rivalry to shape Kenya’s foreign policy in 2019
Control Risks Senior Partner East Africa,Daniel Heal ellaborates more on the details of the RiskMap 2019 at the launch in Capital Club Nairobi.

RiskMap2019 notes that while the US is the biggest investor in Africa, China has made deep inroads over the last decade especially in infrastructure development. Analysts at Control Risks say that infrastructure is a key sector where Washington is likely to intensify its focus on in 2019.

“2019 will show revived US interest in development finance on the continent and a more concerted US commercial strategy towards Africa is likely to take shape. The increased rivalry will therefore open up additional investment opportunities but will also present African countries with increasingly starker foreign policy and commercial choices,” added said Mr. Heal.

RiskMap2019 further notes that the US-China trade tariff confrontation is additionally a risk for global businesses and other nations this year.

 Control Risks’ top-five global risks for 2019

  1. US-China trade rift foretells a new global order

The US-China trade confrontation will define global geopolitics in 2019. Friction between these two nations will complicate business not only for those European businesses operating in both countries but also for those with connections several times removed.

  1. The global data rollercoaster

The stand-off between the three major data regulation ideologies will present a new level of risk for international business in 2019. For China, data is something to be controlled; for the EU, it is something to be protected; for the US, it is something to be commercialized. Businesses must be prepared for the challenge of collecting, storing and transferring data within and between these three domains against a backdrop of inconsistent enforcement and escalating cyber security threats.

  1. US political gridlock

The vice of legislative gridlock will close on policy making in Washington and throw the US into a period of political uncertainty. Resurgent Democrats in the House of Representatives will seek to scrutinize the president under an investigative lens. Pushback from a Republican Senate and White House will erase any hopes of consistency for business operations. Trade policy will remain unpredictable; the pace of deregulation will slow.

  1. Extreme weather disruption

Some of worst business disruption in 2019 will stem from extreme weather and its consequences. From storms to floods to droughts and forest fires, the costs of interrupted production, distribution, sales and travel will skyrocket in 2019. Last year’s record for weather-related insurance claims will likely be surpassed.

  1. Multinationals becoming nationless

As globalized companies enter 2019, they risk becoming nationless nomads, as nationalist politics continue to advance across the world. Formal and informal barriers are rising. Frictionless trade is beginning to rub, supply chains are starting to drag. Business leaders must recalibrate and adapt to this new reality, or global players will end up being played by a world in uncertain transition.