Daily Nation Newspaper

BUDGET BALLOONS

…Increased allocation for debt payment pushes Kenya’s budget to Sh3.62trn

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NAIROBI– Kenya’s  National Treasury  has more than doubled its allocation for debt repayment and pensions, pushing up the total budget for the next financial year to Sh3.63 trillion.

A summary of the estimates for the 2020-21 financial year that Treasury presented to the National Assembly showed that the budget for consolidat­ed fund services (CFS), which includes spending on interest on debts and pension payments, nearly doubled from an earlier estimate of Sh697.6 billion to Sh1.3 trillion.

In February, Treasury had projected a budget of Sh3.01 trillion for the next financial year. A big chunk of the CFS, over 70 percent, comprises domestic and foreign interest payments.

About Sh560 billion will be used to repay interest, pension has been allocated Sh137.2 billion while the contributi­on from Treasury for the new Civil Service Fund will be Sh20.8 billion.

There is another Sh444 billion captured under “Other CFS” which is most likely an allocation for the redemption of maturing loans, both external and domestic.

The government projects that it will get Sh2.03 trillion in taxes and levies such as fines and fees. Ordinary revenue - taxes - is estimated at Sh1.77 trillion.

Recurrent expenditur­e will take up Sh2.019 trillion while developmen­t expenditur­e by ministries will take up another Sh624.5 billion.

Counties have been allocated Sh370 billion as part of the equitable share.

To plug the budget deficit, the government will borrow a total of Sh1 trillion, excluding grants from financial partners, which will be used for developmen­t projects.

This comes at a time when there are plans by the National Treasury to borrow up to Sh500 billion from the Eurobond market as part of its plan to refinance some expensive maturing loans to ease the debt burden.

– THE STANDARD, Kenya.

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