Daily Nation Newspaper

KENYA’S DEBT PROBLEM CREATES BLEAK FUTURE

- By PAUL WAFULA

FOR every US$ 0.99 Kenya is collecting in tax revenue, it is spending US$ 1.28 to fund its budget needs, an overspendi­ng that is driving its voracious debt appetite to plug the shortfall.

An analysis of the most recent expenditur­e data published by the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) shows that Kenya has been spending at least 1.3 times more than its total revenue in the 12 months to August 2018.

This explains the dependency that the Jubilee administra­tion now has on debt.

President Uhuru Kenyatta inherited a public debt of Sh1.7 trillion in March 2013 from the Mwai Kibaki regime.

He has since grown this debt by threefold in the last fi e years to US$50 billion as at September last year.

If this debt was to be shared among all citizens equally, it means that every Kenyan owes about US$987.18.

The increase of Sh3.4 trillion between 2013 and 2018 translates to a borrowing of about US$5.92 billion every year or US$4.9 billion every month. This is the fastest accumulati­on of debt in enya’s history.

DEVOLUTION

resident enyatta’s predecesso­r was more conservati­ve in his approach to debt having taken charge of the country when its public debt was at US$ 6.21 billion.

In 10 years, Mr Kibaki, an economist, grew this debt 2.8 times to US$ 1.6 billion. This translates to about 1.14 billion every year, a far cry from the Sh600 billion a year under the current regime.

Though in accounting practice, the concept of time value of money discourage­s comparison­s of absolute figures since money loses value over time.

But even with factoring in this loss of value over time, the Jubilee administra­tion still keeps the trophy and wins by a staggering margin.

Devolution has also created a new cost centre, which has seen the government set aside more than US$ 2.96 billion every year to fund the devolved units, further worsening the cash ow crisis of the national government.

The fact that the tax collection­s have also been growing at a slower pace than the growth in expenditur­e has only made a bad situation worse.

This has left the National Treasury under Mr Henry Rotich with fewer options than to borrow, despite a public uproar.

BUDGET DEFICIT Treasury however maintains is still in charge of the situation and there is nothing to worry about on the debt situation.

it And it has numbers to back this position.

Treasury Principal Secretary Kamau Thugge says the government has been narrowing down its budget deficit to reduce its need for borrowing as a percentage of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

he fiscal deficit has narrowed from about nine per cent of GDP in 2016/17 to 7.2 percent in 2017/18 and an estimated 6.8 percent this year. The budget submitted to parliament in April reduces this further to 5.6 per cent,” Mr Thugge said.

“The government is also diversifyi­ng its source of funding so as not to rely only on bilateral and multilater­al borrowing,” Mr Thugge told the Nation in a message. But a number of experts and players in the financial sector do not thin all is wellThe Central Bank, which is the go ernment’s ban er, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), the Parliament­ary udget ffice , the nstitute of Certified Public Accountant­s of Kenya (ICPAK) and the Institute of Economic Affairs seem to be reading from a different script from that of the National Treasury.

DEBT RISK

At different times and with varied levels of concern, they all say enya’s debt position is getting to dangerous levels and the country must ease pressure on the debt pedal and engage a lower gear before it is too late.

They also have numbers to back their position. “As advisers of the government, our point is this is the time to begin working on reorganisi­ng our debt, not in a frantic way. Doing it the Eliud Kipchoge way, which is a marathon, and you have to do it in a steady way,” CBK Governor Patrick Njoroge told reporters last week.

“It is important to say that the moment for dealing with debt reorganisa­tion has come,” the CBK boss said.

he was among the first institutio­ns to raise the red ag when it raised enya’s debt ris from low to moderate last year, citing the increasing refinancin­g risks and tighter safety margins

“The higher level of debt, together with rising reliance on non-concession­al borrowing, ha e raised fiscal ulnerabili­ties and increased interest payments on public debt to nearly one fifth of revenue, placing Kenya in the top quartile among its peers,” IMF said in its review. ACCOUNTABI­LITY oliticians and former finance bosses have also weighed in on the matter.

Amani leader Musalia Mudavadi, who has been the most consistent critic on the debt spree, last week asked the go ernment to first account for the billions it has borrowed and also show developmen­t projects that have been put up with the borrowed funds.

“How long will this reckless borrowing without accountabi­lity go on? The Jubilee government and their partners must now tell Kenyans the true level of their country’s indebtedne­ss and the detailed terms and conditions around each debt. Kenyans have a right to know,” Mudavadi said.

The Jubilee administra­tion has made the Eurobond one of its most preferred ways of raising money from the internatio­nal markets.

n the last fi e years, some US$ 6.83 billion have been raised through this route, with the latest issue happening last month where it raised US$ 2.07 billion.

The inaugural Eurobond was in June 2014 where a total of Sh280 billion was borrowed in fi e and year tranches.

PRIORITY

The government went back for another Eurobond last year where it netted US$1.99 billion in 10 and 30-year tranches.

Treasury recognises however that public expenditur­e pressures and poor revenue collection­s are some of the immediate risks it must deal with.

ome of the fiscal ris s include public expenditur­e pressures coupled by revenue underperfo­rmance which could ma e it difficult for the government to actualise and sustain macroecono­mic policies detailed in this BPS,” Treasury says in its current Budget Policy Statement.

ther fiscal ris s include shocks to exchange rates which could impact the size of debt servicing,” Treasury says in the document that lays the foundation for its spending plans for the following financial year.

Though debt is not necessaril­y a bad thing, how it is used and its cost determines how risky it is.

Repayment of debt also comes tops among the go ernment’s e penditure priorities and this leaves lesser resources to do developmen­t.

Available data shows that debt repayments took up nearly US$6.27 billion in 10 months through April, 2019.

REPAYMENTS

Treasury plans to spend nearly US$8.59 billion on debt obligation­s by the end of this financial year in une , meaning additional US$2.32 billion is falling due this month and June.

That includes US$93 million towards the debut fi e year Sh75 million which matures in June.

The statistics show the cash spent on servicing public debt was three times the expenditur­e on developmen­t projects in the same period.

n the coming financial year, the highest interest payments will be due to the Exim Bank of China, at US$37 million. This will be followed by a syndicated loan from the Trade and Developmen­t Bank at US$17 million.

The 2018 internatio­nal sovereign bond will attract US$16 billion in interest payments while new loans will gobble up US$ 40 million in 2019/20, up from Sh18 billion this year.

But borrowing is not going to stop. Treasury says the government is trying to look for alternati e sources of finance to deal with revenue shortfalls and keep its debt under check.

CAPITAL MARKETS

It says it intends to explore other sources of possible financing such as the slamic financing instrument­s, green bonds, Samurai and Panda bonds and diaspora bonds over the medium term.

“The government will continue to diversify the sources of financing o er the medium term by maintainin­g a presence in the internatio­nal capital markets,” Mr Rotich says in the new budget documents.

Samurai bonds are yendenomin­ated usually issued in Tokyo by non-Japanese companies. These bonds are subject to Japanese regulation­s. On their part, Panda bonds are Chinese renminbi-denominate­d designed to allow borrowers to tap into China’s large investor base. Kenya has been increasing­ly turning to China for debts to fund its infrastruc­ture projects and this has seen China upstage Western countries to become the country’s biggest lender.

DEFAULT

ICPAK recently urged the government to keep an eye on the red ags and warning indicators to ensure that the country is not caught-up in a debt crisis in the near future.

“The institute is of the opinion that we must strive to negotiate debt at concession­ary terms covering both the cost and tenure of resulting debt,” chairman Julius Mwatu said.

On the other hand, the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA) warns that Kenya risks defaulting on its debt obligation­s in a decade if the current appetite for borrowing remains unchecked.

The IEA says that Kenya has been borrowing from China, whose loan terms are harsh and which does not do due diligence studies before issuing loans, as opposed to Western countries, which are strict on how a country governs itself before approving lending. “Loans from China accrue more interest and require a shorter time to service as opposed to bodies such as the World Bank or the Internatio­nal onetary und, ’s ohn Mutua noted.

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