The International Monetary Fund stopped Kenya’s access to a $1.5
billion standby credit facility last June after they failed to agree
with the government on a reduction of the fiscal deficit and a delayed
review due to a prolonged election, the fund said on Tuesday.
The
two-year precautionary facility, set to expire next month, was put in
place for Kenya in case of unforeseen external shocks. The country has
not yet tapped the facility, which was preceded by a smaller one-year
credit line in 2015.
“The programme has not been
discontinued but access was lost in mid-June because a review had not
been completed,” Jan Mikkelsen the IMF resident representative in Kenya
told Reuters.
“There was no agreement on the fiscal adjustment at the time and then I do believe the lengthy election period (later in the year) made it difficult to have a review and complete that in the period that followed.”
Mikkelsen
said a team from the fund’s Washington headquarters was in the country
for talks on a Kenyan request for a new standby credit facility.
“We have just started discussions,” he said. “I‘m hopeful we will get an agreement.”
He added that a reduction of the fiscal deficit and the elimination of a cap on commercial lending rates were key to a deal.
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