The Citizen (KZN)

East Africa in trouble – report

MOODY’S SAYS GOVERNMENT DEBT TOO HIGH Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda need to contain their debt burdens.

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Growing debt burdens in the East African countries of Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda are weighing on their fiscal strength and credit quality, Moody’s Investors Service said yesterday.

Government debt is highest in Kenya, where Moody’s expects it to approach 60% of gross domestic product over the next two years. The rise in government debt will be most pronounced in Uganda, where Moody’s expects it to increase by six percentage points of GDP to 44.1% by 2019.

“Increasing debt burdens and deteriorat­ing debt affordabil­ity, even when linked with public investment aimed at enhancing growth and generating foreign exchange to service outstandin­g debt, constrain fiscal space and weigh on our overall assessment of credit quality in Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda,” said Moody’s analyst David Rogovic, co-author of the report.

“Their ability to contain any further rise in debt burdens for the foreseeabl­e future and direct limited domestic resources toward productive uses will be important credit considerat­ions in all four countries.”

Between 2012 and 2017, government debt burdens increased by 13 to 21 percentage points of GDP in all four countries.

Measured as a percentage of government revenue, Rwanda has the lowest debt burden, but has experience­d the most rapid accumulati­on of debt.

Debt accumulati­on has been largely driven by wide fiscal deficits, which have been biggest in Kenya due to infrastruc­ture-related spending combined with subdued revenue collection and the rising cost of debt.

Moody’s said institutio­nal weakness and limited policy effectiven­ess would constrain the ability of Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda to manage higher debt burdens and engineer policy responses to tackle credit pressures, while a stronger institutio­nal and policy framework in Rwanda should allow the government to effectivel­y manage associated risk with a higher debt burden. – ANA

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