The other day, a high-level team of officers from the National
Treasury and the Ministry of Energy
returned from Tel Aviv, where they were negotiating a massive $309 million (Sh30 billion) loan that the Kenyan government wants to borrow to fund a big project in the energy sector.
returned from Tel Aviv, where they were negotiating a massive $309 million (Sh30 billion) loan that the Kenyan government wants to borrow to fund a big project in the energy sector.
The money is being borrowed from the State-controlled Bank Hapoalim of Tel Aviv.
I
gather that the money is being borrowed under the arrangement of ‘tied
aid’ — which means the funds will be used to pay a prominent Israeli
defence contractor who, apparently, signed a commercial agreement with
the ministry last year to provide security services.
DETAILS SCANT
Details of the deal are scant; I will return to the subject when I am in the full picture.
Indeed,
the only reason why I mention it in this column is to make the point
that an upsurge in this type of borrowing is what is responsible for the
massive accumulation of external loans in our books over the past 10
years.
“Contractor-negotiated foreign
loans” in modern parlance, the facility like the one we are about to
sign up with the Israelis is our biggest headache.
They
are the biggest factor when it comes to explaining the exponential
accumulation of commercial foreign debts in our register.
Granted, the syndicated loans and the Eurobond issues we have made in recent years have been a big factor.
However,
these loans that end up in the register without the participation and
involvement of Parliament are the true millstone around our neck with
regard to external debt.
How is the game played? It is all too familiar.
ARRANGE FINANCING
A
foreign contractor, with his local allies and agents, approaches a
Cabinet secretary or a parastatal head with a project and a promise to
arrange financing.
Once the CS or
principal secretary signs a commercial agreement with the contractor,
the National Treasury is invited to sign a loan contract with a foreign
bank (which will have been brought into the picture by the foreign
contractor).
Away from the limelight,
a new expensive commercial loan will have been introduced into our
national external debt register. Just like that.
Here
is another recent example of how the phenomenon of
contractor-negotiated loans have become rampant and common in this
country.
MANDATE OF SOURCING FUNDING
Early
last month, the State-owned Kenya Electricity Company (Ketraco) put out
a statement in the newspapers that it had signed a Sh25 billion
commercial agreement with China Electric Power Equipment and Technology
Company for electrification of the standard gauge railway.
Ketraco
was compelled to make the announcement to correct newspaper reports
that had reported that it had already borrowed the massive amount of
money from China.
“The mandate of
sourcing any funding to finance public projects is the National Treasury
and the Ministry of Energy,” read the statement.
The
press release is how we got to learn that powerful Chinese contractors
had been busy lobbying the government to agree to a proposal to
electrify the SGR.
Isn’t it not just
incredible that these Chinese contractors want to commit us to borrowing
such massive amounts of money from their banks when we are still
struggling with how to make the SGR commercially viable?
ELECTRIFY SGR
Where
and when did we debate and agree that we should be borrowing a whopping
Sh29 billion to electrify the Mombasa-Nairobi section of the SGR?
When
these CSs commit us to these expensive external loans, do they consider
the fact that the capacity of our economy to earn dollars has been
dwindling?
Yet all indications are
that, with the commercial contract with the Chinese contractor in the
bag, progress to the next level is almost assured.
It
will not take long before the Treasury is called in to negotiate a
financial agreement with either the Chinese Exim Bank or any other of
the banks Beijing has established to support their contractors in
foreign countries.
But who knew that
the Ministry of Energy had signed a commercial contract with some
Israeli contractor that has now necessitated the massive borrowing we
are planning from Tel Aviv?
The
projects funded through contractor-negotiated arrangements are not
subjected to competitive bidding. Worse, the deals are very difficult to
track.
Under the PFM Act, the
National Treasury CS is supposed to provide to Parliament a report every
four months on all new loans obtained from outside Kenya or denominated
in foreign currency. It does not happen: The law is honoured more in
breach than in practice.
We are at a point where we must demand more transparency in negotiation of these contracted-negotiated deals.
jaindikisero@gmail.com.
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