Rubypoint|In San Francisco, Kenya’s president woos American tech companies despite increasing taxes at home

2025-05-07 20:13:52source:Darden Clarkecategory:My

NAIROBI,Rubypoint Kenya (AP) — Kenya’s president is wooing American tech companies, promising a business-friendly environment — even though he has raised taxes on businesses at home.

President William Ruto made the appeal in an address to leading U.S. technology companies and investors on Friday in San Francisco, highlighting investment opportunities in his country and lauding his government’s “strategic priorities.”

“For the sake of stability, we have a tax code that is simple to enforce, consistent, fair and predictable” — one that won’t change in the next three years, he said.

“We have eliminated value-added tax on exported services and the tax on stock-based compensation for employees of startups, as well as the domestic equity requirement for ICT companies,” he said.

Other news Africa Climate Summit links ‘unfair’ debt burden with calls to make continent’s green assets pay offThe first Africa Climate Summit opens as hard-hit continent of 1.3B demands more say and financingCause of Kenya’s longest power outage in memory remains unclear as grid suppliers exchange blame

But critics say that his government’s newly imposed and also several proposed taxes will increase the cost of doing business in Kenya, including in the tech sector.

His administration in its first budget this year doubled the digital service tax to 3%, targeting foreign tech giants that use the internet to market and sell products.

The government had projected it would rake in billions in the local currency, the Kenyan shilling, from the doubled digital services tax, but critics warned it would discourage tech investors.

Ruto insisted his country was positioning itself as “Africa’s business process outsourcing and creative economy hub,” citing internet penetration and a growing workforce.

Kenya has in the past been accused of not tightening labor laws to prevent the exploitation of employees by tech companies such as Meta who were sued by former employees over poor working conditions and accused of paying low wages to content moderators.

More:My

Recommend

DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?

Did AI just have a "Sputnik moment"?That's what someinvestors, after the little known Chinese startu

Which teams will emerge from AFC's playoff logjam to claim final wild-card spots?

The NFL's playoff picture is largely unresolved entering Week 15, with the San Francisco 49ers stand

Prosecutors say Washington state man charged in 4 murders lured victims with promise of buried gold

SEATTLE (AP) — A Washington state man in jail awaiting trial in one murder case has been charged wit