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The Great Business Migration: Why Kenyan Entrepreneurs Are Fleeing to Tanzania

BY Steve Biko · March 9, 2025 04:03 pm

For decades, Kenya has prided itself as East Africa’s economic powerhouse, a land of opportunity, innovation, and investment. Nairobi’s skyline tells a tale of ambition, home to towering headquarters of global corporations, banks, and fintech disruptors. However, beneath the surface, a slow but undeniable exodus is unfolding—Kenyan businesses are fleeing, and their destination of choice? Tanzania.

This shift is not happening in whispers. From small startups to established enterprises, companies are actively relocating or expanding to Tanzania, a country historically viewed as a laggard in the regional economic race. But why? What changed? And why does Kenya, the once undisputed investment darling, now feel like an economic graveyard?

A deep dive into the numbers tells an alarming story. Since 2019, Tanzania has attracted nearly $300 million in startup investments, a fraction of Kenya’s $3.3 billion over the same period. On paper, Kenya still leads in total funding. But funding numbers don’t tell the full picture—what matters is the sentiment, and that sentiment is turning sharply against Kenya.

Kenyan businesses are not leaving because they have run out of ideas. They are leaving because the Kenyan government, drunk on taxation and strangled by incompetence, has become the single biggest threat to enterprise. From punitive tax laws to a broken regulatory framework, from political instability to a compromised judiciary, Kenya has become a land where success is punished rather than celebrated.

Read Also: China’s Expanding Grip in Tanzania: Unraveling Security Collaborations, Military Aid, And The Shadow Of A Permanent Base

The Kenyan Tax Guillotine: Bleeding Businesses Dry

If you want to kill a business, over-tax it. President Ruto’s administration has taken this lesson to heart, relentlessly increasing taxes under the guise of raising revenue. The Finance Act 2023, packed with tax hikes on everything from digital transactions to essential goods, has transformed Kenya into an economic minefield.

In contrast, Tanzania has adopted a pragmatic approach—lower tax burdens, streamlined regulations, and incentives for startups and investors. While Kenya is busy suffocating its businesses, Tanzania is welcoming them with open arms.

A Government Obsessed with Collection, Not Growth

Kenya’s government, under economic pressure, has turned into a ruthless tax collection machine, aggressively pursuing businesses for compliance while offering nothing in return. The Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has become a feared entity, notorious for harassing businesses with arbitrary audits, excessive fines, and a “guilty until proven innocent” attitude.

Meanwhile, Tanzania’s regulatory reforms have focused on business-friendly taxation, ensuring companies can thrive before being burdened with excessive taxes. The result? More Kenyan businesses are choosing Dar es Salaam over Nairobi, Arusha over Mombasa.

The Judiciary: A Puppet of Political Interests

Justice in Kenya is for sale. From election petitions to business disputes, the judiciary operates not on legal merit but on political allegiance and financial influence. Investors are acutely aware that should they enter a legal battle in Kenya, the outcome will likely favor the highest bidder.

Tanzania, though not perfect, has maintained a relatively more predictable legal environment, offering better contractual security. It is this predictability that makes businesses feel safer investing in Tanzania than navigating Kenya’s murky judicial waters.

Corruption: The Hidden Cost of Doing Business in Kenya

Kenya’s corruption problem is no secret. Bribes are not just a cost of doing business; they are the cost of survival. Whether it’s obtaining business permits, securing contracts, or dealing with tax authorities, corruption adds a hidden tax on every entrepreneur.

Tanzania, once synonymous with bureaucratic inefficiency, has made significant strides in fighting corruption. President Samia Suluhu’s administration has tightened anti-corruption measures, giving businesses confidence that their investments won’t disappear into a bureaucratic black hole.

Political Stability: The Invisible Hand That Directs Investment

Kenya’s political landscape is a ticking time bomb. Every election cycle comes with violence, business disruptions, and economic instability. The country operates in perpetual political uncertainty, making long-term planning nearly impossible.

Tanzania, on the other hand, has largely maintained political calm. Investors value stability more than anything else, and Tanzania’s predictable political environment is fast becoming its greatest competitive advantage.

The Middle-Class Exodus: When Even Consumers Are Fleeing

It’s not just businesses that are leaving Kenya; its middle class is also looking for exits. Rising costs of living, job insecurity, and excessive taxation are driving professionals to seek opportunities elsewhere, including Tanzania. Without a thriving middle class, businesses struggle, setting off a chain reaction that further cripples the economy.

Digital Economy: Kenya’s Self-Inflicted Wounds vs. Tanzania’s Digital Ascent

Kenya’s once-thriving digital economy is under siege. The government’s obsession with taxing the digital sector—from social media content creators to fintech startups—has made it increasingly difficult to operate. Mpesa, once a revolutionary financial inclusion tool, is now burdened with taxes that make transactions unaffordable for many.

In contrast, Tanzania is actively embracing digital transformation, encouraging innovation without excessive taxation. It’s no surprise that fintech startups are increasingly choosing Tanzania as their base of operations.

Kenya’s Misguided Policies: A Case Study in Self-Sabotage

 Kenya’s economic policies resemble a bad experiment—ill-conceived, poorly executed, and devastatingly punitive. From the controversial Affordable Housing Levy to the absurd minimum tax, businesses are being forced to shoulder the weight of an incompetent government.

Meanwhile, Tanzania has opted for pragmatic economic policies, encouraging investments while ensuring businesses have room to grow before being taxed to death.

The writing is on the wall. Kenya is no longer the undisputed business hub of East Africa. Entrepreneurs, startups, and investors are voting with their feet, and they are heading to Tanzania.

If Kenya continues on this path—over-taxing businesses, enabling corruption, weaponizing the judiciary, and fostering political instability—it will lose its position as the region’s economic leader. And by the time the government realizes it, it may be too late to recover.

Tanzania, once the underdog, is proving that good governance, fair taxation, and stability matter more than just a big economy. The choice is clear—businesses will go where they are valued, not where they are punished.

Kenya has a decision to make: wake up and reform, or continue digging its economic grave. But as it stands, the exodus has begun, and Tanzania is rolling out the red carpet.

Read Also: Mawingu Raises Ksh 1.9 Billion To acquire Tanzanian ISP Habari And expand Its Network In East Africa

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