By SCOLA KAMAU Special Correspondent
In Summary
- Increased credit appetite will thus come as a relief to the government as it seeks to meet its economic growth target of 5.8 per cent.
- Experts fear Kenya may not achieve the 5.8 per cent growth target set by the government this year.
Kenya’s private-sector borrowing hit a two-year
high in the first quarter of the year, driven by falling interest rates
and increased credit appetite from the country’s corporate sector.
According to the latest data from the World Bank,
private-sector borrowing expanded by an average of 25 per cent in the
first four months of the year, well above the Central Bank target of 20
per cent and clear of the country’s 2013 credit growth target of 17 per
cent.
The last time credit expanded by 25 per cent was in March 2012.
The growth saw the country’s banking sector extend
loans worth Ksh327 billion ($3.76 billion) in the year to April or
nearly 2.5 times the Ksh127 billion ($1.46 billion) that the lenders
extended in the same period last year.
Private sector credit grew 23.9 per cent in the 12
months to April 2014, compared with 10.5 per cent in the period to
April 2013.
The high credit appetite was fuelled by falling
interest rates, which have hit a three-year low, and are expected to go
down even further as the government keeps out of the local bond market,
having raised $2 billion from the international market through a
Eurobond. (See video)
Data from the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) and the
Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS) shows average lending rates
fell to 16.49 per cent in April — a rate last seen in June 2011 — on the
back of easing inflationary pressure, increased competition in the
loans market and growth in the economy.
The increased credit appetite will thus come as a
relief to the government as it seeks to meet its economic growth target
of 5.8 per cent, up from last year’s growth of 4.7 per cent.
The uptake of loans is likely to offer relief to
Treasury mandarins keen on stimulating economic activity, which in
recent months has suffered from a series of setbacks including falling
tourist numbers and declining tea earnings — the country’s major foreign
earner.
Vimal Shah, Kenya Private Sector Alliance
chairman, said the increased lending was a sign of economic recovery,
which is expected to continue despite the existing hurdles.
“East Africa is becoming a hub and long-term
investors seeking to get returns in 10 or 20 years to come will continue
borrowing. Lending to the private sector will rise,” said Mr Shah,
adding that the confidence has been reconfirmed by the recently
oversubscribed bond.
Private sector
However, Polycarp Igathe, chairman of the Kenya
Association of Manufacturers, said that while increased borrowing could
be a sign of growth, it could also be an indicator that businesses are
struggling.
“The private sector is investing to grow. However,
it may also mean a cash crunch or working capital constraints. As you
know, the government owes the private sector a lot of cash in VAT
refunds,” said Mr Igathe.
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