The International Monetary Fund has raised Kenya’s debt risk to
moderate, citing the country’s increasing refinancing risks and tighter
safety margins.
In its latest staff review released
last Tuesday, the Washington-based lender estimates that East Africa’s
largest economy will see its total public debt peak at 63.2 per cent of
GDP this year before gradually declining to 58.2 per cent next year.
Public
debt was 58 per cent last year and 53.2 per cent in 2016, with the rise
attributed to acceleration of infrastructure projects over the past
four years.
“The higher level of debt, together with
rising reliance on non-concessional borrowing, have raised fiscal
vulnerabilities and increased interest payments on public debt to nearly
one-fifth of revenue, placing Kenya in the top quartile among its
peers,” the IMF said.
According to Fund’s World
Economic Outlook, Mozambique, Ghana, Zimbabwe and Sudan are among the
continents top countries with a higher debt load.
Within
the Comesa region, South Sudan and Zambia rank as the highest, with a
fast growing debt load that has risen by 271.6 per cent and 220 per cent
change respectively in the past six years.
Debt load
The Bretton-Woods
institution is urging Nairobi to opt for concessional loans to refinance
its debt as opposed to commercial credit, which would allow it to
stretch maturities.
Kenya, which plans to borrow a
further $3 billion in the financial year, according to the Treasury,
will spend the highest amount in the region — $8.6 billion — on debt
repayments in the 2018/19 financial year.
The
government wants the Kenya Revenue Authority to collect $17.21 billion
in the 2018/19 financial year, with half of it going to repay the
country’s growing debt, which hit $45.20 billion as at the end of last
year.
Nairobi will also see its domestic debt
repayments rise by more than 40 per cent to $5 billion in the 2018/19
financial year, from $3.64 billion in the 2017/18 financial year, while
its external debt will rise to $3.6 billion, from $2.37 billion
currently.
The National Treasury’s 2018 annual debt
management report shows that $14.7 billion or 71.7 per cent of the
country’s external debt stock of $24.3 billion was denominated in
dollars by the end of June.
This was up from 32.3 per cent or $8.4 billion in 2013.
Rollover options
The
country is however enjoying rollover options, which has seen more than
$10 billion in the 2017/18 year rolled over, but this will put pressure
on the Treasury as World Bank and IMF sound the alarm over the country’s
debt sustainability status.
The IMF has urged Kenya’s
Treasury and Central Bank to reduce fiscal deficit to stem debt
sustainability by either repealing or significantly modifying interest
rate controls, and bringing in measures to strengthen the financial
sector and improve the business environment.
“We
encourage the authorities to repeal or significantly modify interest
rate controls, noting that the controls have slowed growth, reduced
access to finance, and hampered the effectiveness of monetary policy.
“Any
modification should include the removal of the link between the lending
rate cap and the central bank policy rate, the removal of a floor on
deposit rates, and an increase of the lending cap to a level that
protects consumers from predatory practices,” the IMF said.
“We
applaud Nairobi on its ambitious plans for fiscal adjustment in
2017-2018 and 2018-2019 and the size of the adjustment would help put
the public debt ratio on a downward path.
“Adjustment
efforts should focus on both expenditures and revenues to preserve space
for planned growth‑enhancing public investment and key social
programmes,” the report added.
External shocks
Kenya
is also under pressure to formulate additional steps to meet the
deficit targets for both 2017/18 and 2018/19, with with an emphasis on
realistic revenue projections to increase fiscal transparency.
The
Central Bank of Kenya was also lauded for its move to create an
interest rate corridor, which IMF said would help align the policy rate
with the interbank market rate, thus improving the policy rate’s
signalling role and strengthening the effectiveness of monetary policy.
The
lender also said that Nairobi’s medium-term growth prospects remain
favourable, supported by infrastructure investment and an improving
business environment.
However, continued strong growth and macroeconomic stability hinge on the implementation of reforms.
“In
addition, headwinds from fiscal consolidation and weak credit growth
will weigh on economic activity in the near term. Kenya also remains
vulnerable to a deterioration of security conditions, and to external
shocks that could spur capital outflows, such as a pullback on investors
from emerging markets or tightening global monetary conditions,” said
the IMF.
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