Opinion and Analysis
By Jaindi Kisero, jkisero@ke.nationmedia.com
Even the most strident critics of the government will
accept that our debut Eurobond was a big success. It was a vote of
confidence on our economy by international capital markets.
Sceptics will of course interpret the success of the debut
Eurobond differently. You will hear the argument that it’s all about
hunger for yields by foreign investors, owing to ultra- loose policies
in Japan, Europe and the US.
That it is about vulture funds looking for debt from high-interest and inefficient economies in developing countries.
Responding to the new way of issuance of sovereign
bonds by African countries, the managing director of the International
Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde, warned that the trend would increase
vulnerability of African economies to global financial shocks.
I choose to be an optimist. If the government
reviews its domestic borrowing plan for this year significantly as it
has said, we should start seeing interest rates trending downwards.
Mark you, the effect of the Eurobond will be
kicking in tandem with the advent of a regime of ‘managed interest
rates” where commercial banks will now be forced to operate within the
newly introduced Kenya Banks Reference Rate and an Annual Percentage
Rate.
Are we back to the ancient regime of
administratively dictated and controlled interest rates? No. What we are
introducing is a managed interest rate regime.
Different commercial banks will no longer introduce
different base rates. And, through the new Annual Percentage Rate
process, commercial banks will be forced to openly declare elements in
the huge lending spreads they have been charging customers.
Treasury secretary Henry Rotich said on Wednesday
that-going forward- Kenya would now be issuing sovereign bonds
regularly, diversifying into Asia and the Middle East.
Me thinks that it’s time we upped our game with
regard to public debt management. Currently, debt management
responsibilities are divided among multiple departments at the Treasury
plus the Central Bank of Kenya.
The Debt Management Division at the Treasury
maintains a debt and guarantees database and is responsible for debt
service payments. It is a fully-fledged division of the National
Treasury under a director. The current director is Felister Kavisi.
Then you have another completely different
department, the External Resources Department whose job is to negotiate
and contract loans from official creditors- bilateral governments and
institutions such as the European Union and the World Bank.
The current director is long-serving Treasury insider Jackson Kinyanjui.
The Directorate of Government Investments and
Public Enterprises manages guarantees and on lending agreements with
State corporations. It is under Investment secretary Esther Koimett.
The third player in the space is the Central Bank
of Kenya, which manages the issuance and register of domestic
securities and bonds on behalf of the government.
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