Withdrawal of the facility leaves foreign reserves as the only buffer available to the CBK to protect the shilling in the currency market. PHOTO | FILE | NMG
Summary
- The IMF in mid-March approved a six-month extension of the forex insurance programme with Kenya, which was due to expire in March.
- The Treasury and CBK, in return, promised to repeal the law that controls the cost of loans chargeable by banks within the extended six-month window that expires on Friday.
- Henry Rotich’s bid to repeal the law however suffered a blow as Parliament voted to retain the cap on bank interest rates last month.
The shilling could be left exposed to the turbulence of foreign
exchange markets and global economic shocks should the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) terminate Nairobi’s access to a Sh152 billion ($1.5
billion) precautionary facility that expires in four days.
The
IMF in mid-March approved a six-month extension of the forex insurance
programme with Kenya, which was due to expire in March.
The
Treasury and the Central Bank of Kenya (CBK), in return, promised to
repeal the law that controls the cost of loans chargeable by banks
within the extended six-month window that expires on Friday. Treasury
secretary Henry Rotich’s bid to repeal the law however suffered a blow
as Parliament voted to retain the cap on bank interest rates last month.
The IMF insurance is also tied to the Treasury’s
fulfilment of the promise it made to cut back on the budget deficit
through a raft of measures, including public spending cuts and raising
taxes.
The government’s attempt to effect a 16 per cent
Value Added Tax (VAT) on petroleum products has however been met with
widespread opposition as critics predicted it would derail economic
growth. The High Court sitting in Bungoma on Thursday temporarily
suspended the new fuel tax pending the hearing of a case filed by a
group of youths.
The IMF had said implementation of
the economic policy changes would give Kenyan authorities access to the
precautionary facility.
“We are still evaluating the
implications for the IMF-supported programme,” IMF resident
representative for Kenya Jan Mikkelsen told the Business Daily last week in response to queries on the shilling cushion.
The
shilling remained stable in Friday’s trading at an average of 100.71 to
the dollar, supported by remittance inflows and the CBK’s liquidity
mop-up that has helped counter rising demand for the greenback.
Withdrawal of the facility leaves foreign reserves as the only
buffer now available to the CBK to protect the shilling in the currency
market. Kenya’s foreign reserves however still stand at $8.57billion
equivalent to 5.71 months of import cover, well above the minimum
recommended four months.
Unlike standard IMF bailout
loan programmes, the loan is formally described as a “standby,” meaning
Kenya is only allowed to tap the facility in case of an emergency. The
precautionary facility has been one of tools that have helped Kenya
stabilise the shilling against the dollar-- helping the local currency
to buck the general trend of weakening African currencies during the
period.
The IMF team met the Treasury and other State
officials in the latest round of review last month. The review was
expected to see Kenya allowed or denied further access to the standby
facility.
In a statement issued last month after the
visit, the IMF did not give a position on review of the loan. The
Bretton Woods firm, however, said Kenyan authorities “reiterated their
commitment to macroeconomic policies that would maintain public debt on a
sustainable path, contain inflation within the target range, and
preserve external stability.”
“Discussions focused on
fiscal policies to achieve the authorities’ fiscal deficit target of 5.7
per cent of GDP in financial year 2018/2019, interest rate controls and
structural reforms aiming to ensure the sustainability of
investment-driven, inclusive growth,” said the IMF.
The
IMF revealed this year that the cautionary loan had been suspended
mid-last year before the March 14 expiry date due to failure to meet the
agreed fiscal deficit reduction targets. On Friday experts echoed
sentiments by Kenyan officials that withdrawal of the programme would
not necessarily hurt the shilling but cautioned such a move would have
implications for the country’s borrowing profile.
“With
high levels of foreign exchange reserves, the Central Bank of Kenya
(CBK) can even easily manage a situation where demand is greater than
supply on the foreign exchange market for a relatively long period of
time, allowing a gradual Kenya Shilling adjustment,” said Citi Research
in an outlook. Last month the CBK Governor Patrick Njoroge said the
Kenyan economy is well protected against capital outflows and does not
need the IMF’s precautionary credit facility.
Dr
Njoroge said while the facility would be crucial to providing liquidity
to the financial system if necessary, the country’s external position
was strong at the moment, underpinned by strong remittances and exports.
“We
are confident in terms of our objectives… but at this point, we don’t
need the money from that perspective. We have 5.9 months of import
cover. We are pretty comfortable in that sense,” Dr Njoroge said. His
comments were echoed by Mbui Wagacha, an economist and adviser in the
executive office of the presidency.
“I agree with the
central bank that we actually don’t need the IMF standby facility,
especially when it comes with conditions that we remove the rate cap or
increase taxes,” said Dr Wagacha.
The Citi analysts
warned, however, that investors are likely to be wary of the Kenyan
economy’s exposure to shocks in the absence of the IMF facility, and
thus demand a higher premium on the Eurobond.
“In
recent years, it has become clear to us that investors in many African
countries attach considerable importance to whether a country is on an
IMF programme or not. In fact, it seems they attach more importance to
this than the sovereign ratings provided by various international rating
agencies,” said Citi.
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