Huge payments to creditors abroad may pile up pressure on the shilling. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Commercial banks tightened
their grip on Kenya’s public debt at the end of 2018, latest national
statistics show, exposing taxpayers to higher interest repayments.
The
stock of debt contracted from domestic and foreign commercial banks hit
nearly Sh2.23 trillion last December, accounting for 42.25 percent of
the Sh5.27 trillion gross debt.
The share of commercial
banks in the country’s rising debt climbed from 40.17 percent of the
Sh4.57 trillion in December 2017 and 36.71 percent of the Sh3.83
trillion a year earlier.
The Treasury has racked up
Sh822.56 billion fresh commercial debt in two years through December
2018 , with foreign banks accounting for Sh480.03 billion of that.
This
underlines Kenya’s reliance on domestic and international (Eurobond)
capital markets to raise funds to bridge the gaping deficit in the
budget.
President Uhuru Kenyatta’s administration has largely been
contracting short-term commercial debt since September 2014 to build
economic growth-enhancing roads, bridges, power plants and the Standard
Gauge Railway(SGR).
That started after Kenya became a
lower middle income economy, limiting her access to highly concessional
loans from development lenders such the World Bank Group’s International
Development Association.
Bilateral lenders accounted for Sh894.05 billion, or 16.96
percent, of the total debt last December. China, Kenya’s largest single
lender, accounted for 70.65 percent of the external debt with a
portfolio of $6.2 billion (Sh620.66 billion) which largely come on
semi-concessional terms.
The share of multilateral
lenders such as the World Bank Group was Sh874.68 billion, or 16.59
percent of the gross debt stock in December 2018. Interest on commercial
debt is market-determined unlike multilateral and bilateral loans which
come on concessional and semi-concessional terms in addition to grace
period.
“Commercial loans are expensive and a leaning towards this trend
is increasing the country’s debt service,” the Parliamentary Budget
Office, a professional unit which advises legislators on financial,
budgetary and economic matters, warns in its Budget Watch report for the
current financial year ending in June.
“This will invariably lead to higher interest payments.”
Treasury
secretary Henry Rotich has budgeted for nearly Sh870.62 billion to be
paid to creditors this financial year ending June 2019. This is more
than half the revised Sh1.61 trillion in projected tax receipts,
assuming there will be no debt rollover.
That comprises Sh505.96 billion in domestic obligations and Sh364.66 billion to foreign creditors.
Interest payments to domestic investors will gobble up nearly
Sh285.61 billion, while another Sh220.35 billion will be spent on
redemptions (principal sums) of maturing debt contracted locally.
About
Sh250.28 billion will go into payment of principal amounts for foreign
loans, while interest will eat up Sh114.37 billion, according to 2018
Medium Term Debt Management Strategy.
Treasury paid out
Sh69.95 billion to external creditors in the July-December 2018 period,
data in the quarterly Economic and Budget Review report shows,
comprising Sh46.09 billion interest and Sh23.86 billion principal
amount.
The report does not disclose payouts to domestic creditors.
Some
Sh33.17 billion, or 47.43 percent, of the payments went to foreign
commercial creditors, while bilateral and multilateral lenders pocketed
Sh25.37 billion and Sh11.40 billion, respectively.
Payouts
to external lenders are, however, set to rise in the second half of the
current financial year (January to June 2019) when some of the
facilities procured in recent years fall due.
Some of
the major external debt repayments due between July 2018 and June 2019
include the debut Eurobond, whose first five-year tranche will be
maturing, at Sh98.15 billion, Citi Bank syndicated loan (Sh86.64
billion) and Trade Development Bank (Sh50.29 billion), the Treasury data
shows.
Others are the SGR financier Export-Import
(Exim) Bank of China (Sh31.08 billion), World Bank’s IDA (Sh20.90
billion), second Eurobond floated February 2018 (Sh15.51 billion),
France (Sh9.08 billion), Japan (Sh6.13 billion) and China Development
Bank (Sh5.18 billion).
Repayments to the Asian
Development Bank/Asian Development Fund (ADB/ADF) will amount to Sh4.46
billion, while Italy, Germany, Belgium, Spain and Saudi Fund will get
Sh3.43 billion, Sh2.67 billion, Sh2.37 billion, Sh1.94 billion and
Sh1.60 billion, respectively.
The figures are subject to shilling’s conversion rates against the US dollar.
Huge
payments to creditors abroad may pile up pressure on the shilling if
the country’s top foreign exchange earners such as agricultural exports,
tourist receipts and remittances from Kenyan immigrants underperform.
Paul
Muthaura, the chief executive of the Capital Markets Authority (CMA),
has proposed that the Treasury should consider a mixture of dollar and
shilling-denominated borrowing from international markets to cut Kenya’s
exposure to foreign exchange rate risks.
A right
balance between a shilling and foreign currency portions when issuing
sovereign bonds such as Eurobond and contracting concessional loans, he
said, will help ease the growing burden of servicing the country’s
piling external debt.
“There’s no question about
investor appetite for Kenya’s debt. It is time for us to start testing
for shilling appetite among global investors to manage (foreign
exchange) risks,” Mr Muthaura said on February 1.
Such a
strategy has already been adopted in other countries such as India
which has since 2014 been issuing rupee-denominated bonds in
international markets for finance infrastructure development.
No comments:
Post a Comment