Kenya’s economy is forecast to grow from around five per cent in
2017 to 6.2 per cent this year. However, Central Bank Governor says the
interest rate cap is holding it back.
The projected
growth for 2018 is 0.7 per cent higher than the World Bank’s forecast of
5.5 per cent, but is within the Treasury’s estimate of above six per
cent.
At a press briefing after the Monetary Policy
Committee meeting last week, Central Bank of Kenya Governor Patrick
Njoroge said the country’s economic growth would be boosted by positive
fiscal policy, review of interest rate cap law (which will strengthen
the banking sector), commencement of direct flights to the US and ease
of doing business.
The CBK wants a repeal of the law
capping interest rates, which it says is having a negative effect on the
economy. According to Dr Njoroge, the controls have resulted in a
credit crunch as banks ration credit, slowing down the economy.
“The
interest rate caps have been acting as a brake to the economy.... This
is something we need to deal with so as to support rather than inhibit
economic dynamism,” said Dr Njoroge.
Shrinking credit
However, Treasury Permanent Secretary Dr Kamau Thugge said when
the cap was effected in September 2016, credit to the private sector was
already shrinking.
“The private sector credit cannot
be fully explained by the caps, it was at four per cent when the rate
cap law came into effect,” said Dr Thugge during a recent public forum
in Nairobi on the proposals for the 2018-2019 financial year.
He
added that the slowdown in credit growth was not unique to Kenya as it
was also happening in Uganda and Tanzania that have not adopted a cap on
interest rates.
The interest rate cap was set at four
percentage points above the central bank’s benchmark rate, to limit the
cost of borrowing from commercial banks.
Lenders have been accused of engaging in blackmail and economic sabotage to force through amendments to the law.
It
is expected that tourism and export business will be boosted by the
direct flights to the US, while a decrease in transport costs of exports
through the use of the standard gauge railway will also boost growth.
However, a higher oil import bill is expected due to rising international oil prices.
Oil prices
According
to the World Bank, oil prices are forecast to rise to $56 a barrel in
2018 from $53 last year, as a result of steadily-growing demand, agreed
production cuts among oil exporters and stabilising US Shale oil
production.
Central Bank said the food import bill is expected to almost double to 2.9 per cent up from 1.5 per cent last year.
The country will however import less chemicals, manufactured food and machinery this financial year.
Financing projects
Dr
Njoroge also asked the government to consider other options of funding
projects apart from debt, saying even though he sees the current public
debt level as sustainable, it could become difficult to depend on
borrowing in future to finance huge infrastructural projects.
“At
this point we do not see our public debt level as being unsustainable.
That is not the concern today. A lot of the borrowing was for
infrastructure investment of which we see a large deficit,” said Dr
Njoroge.
He added: “The issue is that the room for
borrowing to finance such projects is narrowing. We need alternative
financing for these projects.”
He asked the government to substitute borrowing to finance infrastructure projects with public private partnership in order to cut the growing public debt.
He asked the government to substitute borrowing to finance infrastructure projects with public private partnership in order to cut the growing public debt.
Latest
CBK data indicates the government’s internal debt stood at Ksh2.22
trillion ($21.7 billion) in November last year, while external debt
stood at Ksh2.31 trillion ($22.2 billion) in September.
Base lending rate
While
retaining the base lending rate at 10 per cent, the Monetary Policy
Committee said there was room for an accommodative monetary policy in
the near term.
Price growth in Kenya slowed to 4.5 per
cent in December, the weakest advance since May 2013. This came as food
inflation slowed after drought eased.
The MPC noted
“that inflation expectations are well anchored within the government
target range” of 2.5 per cent to 7.5 per cent.
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