Daily Nation Newspaper

State cooked books and lied about big debt – Kenyan MP

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NAIROBI - Gatundu South MP Moses Kuria has claimed that the government cooked books and cheated Kenyans on the state of the economy and debt levels.

This, Kuria said, has subjected millions of Kenyans to untold suffering.

In the starkest admission by the Jubilee MP that Kenyans are on their own, Kuria claimed the government has been lying to Kenyans on various issues, among them the debt situation and the state of the economy.

He said President Uhuru Kenyatta’s administra­tion has committed ‘treason’ against Kenyans, which, in effect, means it has betrayed the trust of those it is supposed to serve.

“For seven years, we have cheated about our debt, we have cooked books, we have cheated people that we do zero-based budgeting. We have taken loans at 9 percent that left people offering us money at one percent. That to me is treason…” said the MP.

Kuria was speaking on Citizen TV’s Day Break show on Tuesday morning.

He singled out Parliament as having failed in its oversight role, in effect giving the Executive a free ride to ramp up an unsustaina­ble amount of debt.

The MP, who is also a member of the House Budget Committee, wants both the Executive and Parliament to apologise for being willing accomplice­s to acts of omission and commission that have brought the country to its knees.

He wants former Treasury Cabinet Secretary Henry Rotich and former Principal Secretary Kamau Thugge to look Kenyans in the eye and admit that they failed them.

Kuria said Kenya chose to take expensive loans because lenders such as the World Bank, whose loans are affordable, have no room for corruption.

“Because institutio­ns like the World Bank, African Developmen­t Bank and other multilater­al lenders have no opportunit­ies for kickbacks, we refuse their money and go for 9 percent and 10 per cent. Tell me whether these people will not burn in hell?”

Two weeks ago, Parliament raised the country’s debt ceiling to Sh9 trillion, giving the government a blank cheque to burden Kenyans with more debt.

In the financial year ending June 2019, for every Sh100 that the country earned from taxes, non-tax revenues and grants, Sh57 went into servicing debt. This compares to only Sh25 Treasury paid six years ago.

The cash-strapped Exchequer has been forced to suspend some developmen­t projects and do away with non-essential spending such as tea, advertisem­ents and travelling, so as not to be at odds with its creditors.

And it has stopped being so cocky about the sustainabi­lity of the country’s debt, which has risen to Sh6 trillion as at August — or 63 per cent — assuming a gross domestic product (GDP) of US$93 billion.

The upper limit is 70 per cent. Debt as a fraction of GDP has increased from 42.1 per cent in June 2013. Generally, the higher the country’s debt-to-GDP ratio, the higher the risk of defaulting. It is even worse when most of the debts are in foreign currencies.

That is why starting last year, Treasury began to acknowledg­e the need to reverse the voracious uptake of expensive external loans lest it tips over the financial cliff. In its recent public debt management reports, Treasury has admitted that things have hardened for Kenya.

The Government says it is trying to restructur­e its debt by lengthenin­g the average maturity time of its loans. It has, however, had problems restructur­ing its loans, with investors still preferring shortterm government papers.

During the show, Kiambu MP Jude Njomo, suggested that the country could become ‘ungovernab­le’ as a result of creating a small club of the rich while the majority of Kenyans languish in poverty.

“We only have a small crop of people at the top who are making money while those at the bottom are not. I think this county can become ungovernab­le,” said Mr Njomo, also a Jubilee lawmaker.

They spoke on a day the Government pushed through Parliament changes that will subject Kenyans to more expensive loans by removing the interest rates cap.

While the Government has been arguing that the cap had forced it to borrow from the domestic market, Kuria alleged that the Jubilee government has been borrowing from itself.

He said some parastatal­s had kept money in banks, hoping to make a kill from savings.

He revealed that Rotich’s successor at Treasury, Ukur Yatani, had discovered Sh70 billion that was stashed away in the banks by parastatal­s.

“Since Ukur Yatani took over the National Treasury we have recovered more than US$680 million that was stored in banks. Money from the Communicat­ion Authority and the Kenya Ports Authority were all stored in banks, and the same government borrows that money then we tell the public we are over-borrowing domestic loans. That is fraud,” he said.

Economist Kwame Owino said young people could not access credit as it was too expensive. “It is evident that interest rates are too high and therefore it constrains the ability of small people to borrow money and use that for productive enterprise,” he said.

While the State insists that the reason is due to the country’s upgrade into a lower-middle-income country, which saw the flow of cheap loans reserved for poor countries stop coming, fiscal indiscipli­ne is also to blame.

 ??  ?? Gatundu South MP Moses Kuria.
Gatundu South MP Moses Kuria.

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