Opinion and Analysis
By George Bodo
In Summary
- Loss of public funds and poor fiscal discipline has set Nairobi on Accra’s ruinous path.
The Ghanaian cedi has now been classified as one of
the world’s worst performing currencies this year. And officially,
Africa’s worst performing currency.
The Cedi has frighteningly depreciated by 58 per cent since
the year begun and by 97 per cent if stretched back to the beginning of
2013.
The Kenya shilling on the other hand seems to be on
a good run and has only depreciated by a marginal two per cent since
the beginning of the year and looks poised to be more stable in the
second half of 2014.
But the problems bedeviling the Ghanaian cedi and
its economy in general are purely structural and are very similar to
Kenya’s current economic situation.
First, Ghana is dealing with a fundamental problem
of non-existent production. The country’s exports have significantly
declined to the extent the ability to generate foreign exchange has been
severely impaired.
And the problem is that the country’s policymakers
have been slow to enact policies to attract and encourage domestic
production and Ghana is now an import-dependent economy.
These are similar deficiencies Kenya has been
dealing with for a long time and could also be headed the Ghana way. In
fact, between 2008 and 2013 Kenya’s total imports have grown by 84 per
cent compared to just 47 per cent growth in exports (and of big concern
is the fact that up to 95 per cent of Kenya’s imports are the
non-productive home use goods).
Second is the fiscal indiscipline. Ghana’s public
sector wage bill currently stands at 70 per cent of total government
revenues. Kenya is also currently having its own battles with the wage
bill.
While Ghana’s tax revenues stayed constant at some
18 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) between 2011 and 2013,
expenditures rose from 20 per cent of GDP in 2011 to 27 per cent at the
end of 2013.
This has resulted in double-digit fiscal deficits, 12 per cent of GDP in 2012 and 11 per cent last year.
To finance these deficits, Ghana has had to tap the
international debt markets twice, borrowing $1.5 billion (Sh132.4
billion) via Eurobonds at an average cost of 8.25 per cent.
This increase in Ghana’s debt has placed a major
burden on its public finances to the extent that interest payments in
2013 alone were more than twice Ghana’s oil revenues.
And as if that is not enough, interest payments
this year will be four times the country’s oil revenues. So now the
benefit of Ghana’s oil discovery has been compromised by the increase in
borrowings.
Back home, Kenya just borrowed $2 billion (Sh176.5 billion) from international debt markets to help bridge its budget deficit.
At the close of fiscal year 2013/2014, Kenya’s
interest payments on debts were nearly 15 per cent of government
revenues and now this could rise to 20 per cent in the current 2014/2015
fiscal year. And Kenya still plans to borrow more dollars from the debt
market.
Finally, Ghana is suffering from a manifestation of the ‘people
risk’. This is about not having the right people to take bold steps in
formulating the right policies to help bring the economy out of the
woods.
That also helps explain why the IMF has stepped in. There’s a general lack of high quality policy formulation in Kenya too.
So while Ghana is already paying for the ‘national
sins’ it started committing about five years ago, and especially sins
that entail fiscal indiscipline and pilferage of government revenues,
Kenya has already started committing the same national sins.
There are high chances that, if bold policies are not adopted, then the Kenya shilling’s future performance is also at stake.
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