Daily Nation Newspaper

IMF TO OFFER LOW-COST LENDING INTO NEXT YEAR AS LOANS HIT $15.6M

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WASHINGTON- The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has pledged to continue loaning sub-Saharan countries into 2021 after the Bretton Woods body hit Sh1.7 trillion loans over the last six months.

IMF said this year, it released $16 billion in loans and debt relief as emergency assistance but more would be needed since the global financial markets have become too expensive for small economies.

The multilater­al lender said the emergency loans to countries like Kenya have put them near limits set by the institutio­n and hence they have temporaril­y increased annual limits.

“The IMF is stepping up efforts to continue this support in 2021. Many of the countries that have received funding from the IMF have reached, or are approachin­g, their relevant limits for annual access,” IMF said in ‘Sub-Saharan Africa regional Economic Outlook.’

“So the IMF has temporaril­y increased these annual limits and has allowed for more frequent disburseme­nts under the Rapid Credit Facility, allowing members to obtain further financial support from the IMF during this extraordin­ary period.”

In May, the IMF approved a $739 million (Ksh79.3) billion loan to Kenya to help the country fight Covid-19.

They joined the World Bank which gave Kenya’s health ministry Sh5.3 billion ($50 million) and a further Sh106 billion ($1 billion) loan to help fund the budget during thepandemi­c.

The loans which are usually long term, low interest and have a grace period for payment will help treasury balance its books that lately has seen Kenya use a third of all exports earnings just to service commercial debts.

Kenya has increasing­ly tapped the foreign commercial markets for loans has come under pressure during repayment since the country relies on getting new loans to repay its principal obligation­s.

By the end of June 2020 the total cumulative debt service payments to external creditors amounted to Sh223.4 billion. This comprised of Sh101.6billion (45.5 percent) principal and Sh121.8billion (54.5 percent) interest according to the Treasury Budget Review Outlook paper.

The total cumulative debt service payments to external creditors comprised of 54 percent, 33 percent and 13 percent of the total payments to commercial, bilateral and multilater­al creditors respective­ly.

The IMF loan comes at a time when concerns have been raised over how Covid-19 funds are being used in Kenya after it was revealed that the country was splashing millions of shillings on non-essentials as well as buying 'tea and snacks' at inflated prices.

A special audit also revealed a Sh7.8 billion tender scam at the Kenya Medical Supplies Authority – KEMSA over the handling of emergency procuremen­t of medical supplies which saw politicall­y connected companies clinch tenders some of which were inflated. – STANDARD, Kenya.

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