Jump to navigation

Kenya

The bills keep piling up

Arrears on payments to contractors and suppliers have risen by 8% this year

Treasury Secretary Ukur Yatani may have gained a bit of breathing room via a $2.4 billion programme with the IMF in May, and a fourth Eurobond issue worth US$1bn in June, but mounting arrears and debt burden are prompting concern among analysts in Nairobi.

Nifty accounting work saw Yatani keep $9bn in loan redemptions off the official debt total in his June budget statement, and the practice appears to be spreading. The Treasury admitted this week that Kenya's total debt has grown by at least $4bn since March, and another Treasury report said arrears on payments to contractors and suppliers increased 8% in the year to June. The pending bills, including unfulfilled statutory payments to pension funds, come to 359.5bn shillings ($3.3bn).

In his budget statement for the 2021/22 fiscal year, Yatani forecast that Kenya's budget deficit will fall slightly to 7.7% of GDP from 9.0% (AC Vol 62 No 13, Banking on a fast recovery). Kenya is seeing another increase in Covid-19 cases, prompting the extension of already tight curfews and travel restrictions in Nairobi and neighbouring counties. That means little prospect of an early recovery of tourism.

The Parliamentary Budget Office notes that the government's debt burden has now been pushed up to 69% of GDP and 87% of the KSh9 trillion ($90 billion) total debt ceiling.

The indications are that Yatani has accepted that debt will continue to increase in the medium term. Having increased the debt ceiling twice since taking his ministerial post in 2019, Yatani is now seeking parliamentary approval to move the debt ceiling up to KSh12trn (AC Vol 62 No 14, Digging deeper into debt).



Related Articles

Banking on a fast recovery

East Africa’s three leading economies say they’ll rebound quickly from the pandemic, but borrowing is ballooning

More spending to secure the post-pandemic recovery was the message of the finance ministers from Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania as they announced their annual budgets on 11 June. The t...


Digging deeper into debt

Debt and spending have mushroomed, but vested interests will fight attempts to rein in the elite’s cash cows

The Treasury's recent successful flotation of a billion dollars in Eurobonds signals that Kenya is not about to wean itself off a dangerous addiction to expensive commercial credit...


Serious fraud hunt

Britain's Serious Fraud Office announced on 4 February that it is closing its 'investigation into contracts secured with the Kenyan government by Anglo-Leasing finance and related ...


Carter’s quiet doubts

Eight-and-a-half months after Kenya’s Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission declared Uhuru Kenyatta winner of the March 2013 presidential poll, a key electoral obse...


Fixing the finance

Winning this year's elections is more important for KANU than obeying the IMF

Within eight weeks Finance Minister Musalia Mudavadi must produce a budget. The International Monetary Fund expects Kenya to meet its fiscal guidelines and speed up privatisation. ...