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State piles on Sh1 trillion debt

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Finance Minister Uhuru Kenyatta quenches his thirsts during his 2009/ 10 Budget speech at the Parliament Building on the 11 June 2009. PHOTO/ Fredrick Onyango

Finance Minister Uhuru Kenyatta quenches his thirsts during his 2009/ 10 Budget speech at the Parliament Building on the 11 June 2009. PHOTO/ Fredrick Onyango  

By  MUNA WAHOMEPosted Saturday, June 13 2009 at 17:54

In Summary

  • Probably cognisant of this, no sovereign bond will be issued this financial year

Kenyans must be feeling relieved after Treasury avoided increasing taxes, but a closer look at the piling debt should be enough to make them think again.

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The government in the ending fiscal year crossed the Sh1 trillion borrowing threshold and is seeking to pile up even more.

That pushed the amount each Kenyan has to pay foreigners and local lenders to Sh26,315, distributed at the ratio of 53:47 in favour of foreign lending.

The State in the ending year borrowed an extra Sh130 billion as revenue sources dried up with economic growth stagnating to 1.7 per cent.

But with well over Sh150 billion more expected to be borrowed internally and externally, the per capita debt will shoot up to nearly Sh29,000. The total will equal more than 44 per cent of GDP.

Treasury, however, says it has taken care to avoid crowding out private borrowers and asserts in the newly issued Medium Term Debt Management Strategy that IMF and World Bank are in the picture over their borrowing strategy.

“Debt sustainability analysis done taking into account the planned new borrowing demonstrates that we face a low risk of debt distress,” said deputy Prime Minister and Finance minister Uhuru Kenyatta in his Budget speech.

“Therefore, we are in a position to comfortably borrow in the short term to finance the proposed fiscal stimulus package without compromising our macroeconomic objectives.”

Mr Kenyatta has indicated some foreign concessional lending might be used to offset domestic borrowing. The State has certainly resorted to this with a good reason.

“No international sovereign bond will be issued in the financial year 2009/10,” says the debt management book.

Indeed, 70 per cent of the money in the year will be borrowed locally. The balance is likely to come from the International Development Association, which accounts for 46 per cent of our foreign borrowing, the European Union, the African Development Bank, Japan, France and Germany, who are the top lenders.

In the market, a section of the players agree with the position that Treasury can take the Sh109 billion from the market without raising rates if the Central Bank of Kenya manages short-term rates well. The bank governor took the same position last week.

Players point to the fact that Treasury borrowed Sh17 billion, the highest-ever weekly auction borrowing, last week with the rates edging down.

“I think the crowding out effect is exaggerated here. If CBK manages the short-term rates well, there should be no problem with the rates,” said bond market player Fred Mweni, noting liquidity has returned to the market after the recent crunch.

The short-end rates include repos and the Central Bank Rate over which the chief banker has control.

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Add a comment (2 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by geogez
    Posted July 09, 2009 11:42 AM

    I keep commenting on the ministers tendency of signing off Kenyans in huge loans without having clear picture of how we intend not only to spend but to repay the same.The money we are dashing to US to beg was actually meant for cusioning the sub-saharan countries after the Britonwood institutions sold off its gold reserves slightly after the G8 meeting held in London.Its unfortunate that the same is still being given as loans to benefit IMF/WB

  2. Submitted by wuod_aketch
    Posted June 13, 2009 10:53 PM

    Spending billions for military hardware is throwing money out of the window. We all know that these people will buy outdated planes and tanks. We better spend those billions on reforming our agriculture,tourism, improving universities and building research institutions.This is the only way out. Nobody is going to attack Kenya because Obama is taking care of our protection. Who can imagine M7 bombing Barack's grandmother's home? Uganda has a lot to lose. Close the borders and their war with Kenya will last only a day because they will run short of fuel, ammunition and spare parts.

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