Power & Market

The Parasitic Kenyan State: Murray Rothbard’s Anatomy of Power and a Decade of Economic Scandals (2014–2024)

Kenya

In Anatomy of the State, Murray N. Rothbard describes the state not as a benevolent servant of society but as an organization that maintains a monopoly on force and extracts revenue through coercion rather than voluntary production and exchange. It operates via the political means, predation and systematic theft of private resources, rather than the economic means of honest labor and trade. The Kenyan government from 2014 to 2024 perfectly illustrates Rothbard’s thesis: a parasitic caste that siphons public funds while cloaking predation in the rhetoric of development, security, and public service.

Between 2014 and 2024, Kenya lost hundreds of billions of shillings to scandals that reveal the state’s core nature. In 2014, the country issued its first Eurobond, raising approximately Ksh 215–250 billion. Official narratives promised infrastructure and debt reduction. Yet auditors and opposition voices could not trace large portions of the proceeds. Funds moved through opaque accounts with little evidence of productive use. As Rothbard explains, the state secures its lifeline by rendering predation legal, orderly, systematic. The Eurobond became a textbook case: coerced borrowing (backed by future taxes) funneled into unaccounted channels while citizens bore the debt burden.

The 2015 National Youth Service (NYS) scandal followed. Over Ksh 791 million—later estimates reached billions across phases—was looted through ghost suppliers, fake invoices, and inflated contracts for youth empowerment programs. A second wave in 2018 added roughly Ksh 9 billion more. Intended as an investment in the next generation, NYS funds instead enriched a parasitic network of officials and cronies. Rothbard notes that the state’s bureaucracy forms a small ruling caste sustained by the surplus of production. Here, that caste diverted resources meant for public welfare into private pockets, lowering producers’ incentives while expanding its own privileges.

By 2019, the Arror and Kimwarer dams scandal exposed even bolder predation. The Treasury allocated Ksh 19.7 billion for two flagship water and power projects in Elgeyo Marakwet. Minimal work occurred; equipment sat idle while contractors received payments. Then-Treasury Cabinet Secretary Henry Rotich and associates faced charges, but the case dragged amid accusations of political protection. Rothbard would recognize this as the state transcending its own limits: projects sold as essential services became vehicles for plunder, with judicial and political mechanisms shielding the predators.

The covid emergency in 2020 provided another opportunity. Billions flowed to the Kenya Medical Supplies Authority (KEMSA) for PPE and equipment. Investigative reports revealed covid millionaires, suppliers with no track record awarded inflated contracts. The Auditor General flagged irregular procurement, ghost firms, and unaccounted funds. Rothbard observes that war or crisis allows the state to impose tyranny under slogans of defense and emergency. Kenya’s pandemic response mirrored this: coercion (taxes funding emergency spending) met predation (looting masked as urgent public health).

These scandals are not aberrations but symptoms of Rothbard’s organization of the political means. Successive administrations preserved themselves through ideology, portraying theft as development or hustler economics, and alliances with intellectuals, media, and vested business interests. Auditor General reports routinely flag unaccounted billions, yet convictions remain rare. The ruling caste purchases allies via subsidies and contracts while independent criticism is marginalized as opposition noise.

Rothbard warns that the state fears fundamental threats to its power most of all. In Kenya, this manifests in weak prosecutions, bail for the powerful, and narratives that blame a few bad apples rather than the system itself. Each scandal subtracts from production, erodes trust, and fuels debt, exactly as Rothbard predicted: the robber ultimately destroys his own subsistence.

From Eurobond to dams and pandemic funds, 2014–2024 revealed Kenya’s state as Rothbard described: parasitic, coercive, and inherently opposed to genuine capital formation. Citizens produced the wealth; the State consumed it. True reform demands recognizing this anatomy, not tinkering with the predator, but limiting its reach so the economic means can flourish once more. Until then, public resources will continue feeding the parasitic machinery Rothbard so clearly dissected.

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