A rapid build-up of costly public debt in the past five years
has put the Kenyan economy at the risk of turbulence, the African
Development Bank (AfDB) has warned in new research.
Kenya’s
public debt crossed the Sh5 trillion mark for the first time in June
last year, representing a growth of 14.3 per cent over Sh4.41 trillion a
year earlier.
The rise has shone a light on Treasury
mandarins and renewing the protracted debate on the country’s ability to
carry the load in the long term.
“The public debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio increased
considerably over the past five years to 57 per cent at the end of June
2018,” says the AfDB in a new outlook. “Half of public debt is
external.”
The Treasury mandarins have often maintained that Kenya can bear its current debt load.
The
Treasury said last year it is engaging international investors that
Kenya owes money to ensure looming debt obligations are managed
effectively without exposing the country’s coffers to liquidity
pressures.
“The share of loans from non-concessional
sources has increased, partly because Kenya issued a $2 billion Eurobond
in February 2018,” says AfDB.
“An October 2018
International Monetary Fund debt sustainability analysis elevated the
country’s risk of debt stress to moderate.”
Last August, the Treasury kicked off recruitment of a team of
debt management experts in a move that signalled rising concern over
Kenya’s spiralling loans load that has exerted liquidity pressures on
the economy.
Up to 20 experts were sought in the
recruitment drive that was intended to sharpen the government’s focus on
management of costs and ability to raise and service new debt,
according to the Treasury.
“They will provide guidance
in determining borrowing ceilings for national and county governments,”
Treasury Principal Secretary Kamau Thugge said then
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