National Treasury building. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- The World Bank has been pushing for more disclosures since Kenya entered the Eurobond market
- Kenya has borrowed almost 10 commercial loans from international lenders since President Mwai Kibaki’s 2011 debut four-year Eurobond
- Heavily-indebted countries have in the past fudged numbers to camouflage their debts
The Treasury has set in motion plans to put up a web portal
disclosing details of Kenya’s debt position in a move intended to raise
transparency on the country’s public finances.
The
investor relations page, similar to that used by listed companies, will
have information on Kenya’s debt holders, laws on public debt, debt
calendar and monthly reports keeping track of the country’s
indebtedness.
The disclosures first announced by former
Finance Secretary Henry Rotich during his Budget speech in June are
also intended to enhance predictability in the issuance and trading of
Treasury bills and bonds.
“Given the importance of
Eurobonds in our debt portfolio, we will strengthen the debt office to
adopt modern liability management instruments to reduce cost and
settlement risks, in addition to introducing an investor relations
unit," said Mr Rotich.
According to Treasury sources,
the World Bank has been pushing for more disclosures since Kenya entered
the Eurobond market, aimed at keeping international investors abreast
of the country’s economic situation.
Leaked documents
The Treasury
has not been keen on publicly revealing details of the prospectus it
uses to market Eurobonds abroad, with the media having to rely on leaked
documents to publish information on the debt issues.
On
May 16, Kenyans woke up to news that the government had secured Sh210
billion in a third Eurobond loan when the Treasury made the dawn
announcement from London, catching unawares many Kenyans who did not
have a clue that government officials were out in the international
markets soliciting for a fresh Eurobond.
Kenya has
borrowed almost 10 commercial loans from international lenders since
President Mwai Kibaki’s 2011 debut four-year Eurobond, but details of
these debts are kept secret, including their repayment terms.
In
2018, while seeking alternative funding, the Treasury sought to put out
30-year bonds privately placed with a few investors, away from the
public eye.
"The National Treasury is planning issuance
of Treasury bonds through private placement. The purpose of the meeting
will be to undertake a market sounding exercise... towards the issuance
and to discuss and agree on the bonds pricing methodology," read a
letter seen by Reuters in July 2018.
The Investor
Relations unit fashioned from Brazil’s transparency guidelines promises
to bring prospectus level of detail to the public eye.
Information
and statistics on issuances, buybacks, outstanding debt and its average
maturity and life, maturity profiles and average costs for the debts,
including domestic and external debt, will be available.
PFM rules on manageable debt levels, as well as the debt management strategies, will be referenced on the website.
The
Yearly Issuance Calendar will have, at the start of each year, dates of
auctions as well as the types of bonds to be offered in each auction.
Cat and mouse game
The
Treasury has been playing cat and mouse with the public, offering
different figures for different occasions, as noted by Parliament.
Farhiya
Ali, the nominated Senator from Wajir County, said during a Finance
Committee meeting with Treasury in March 2018 that Treasury has so many
parameters that MPs no longer had an idea what kind of debt they were
dealing with.
"We should agree on one metric because we
keep hearing debt to GDP and some other figures which we cannot
understand even us with financial background. What about the mwananchi
whose taxes actually pay the debt?" Ms Ali posed.
Heavily-indebted
countries have in the past fudged numbers to camouflage their debts,
which only become apparent when their finances capitulate and they seek
recue plans from multilateral lenders who require due diligence.
Mozambique’s
tuna bonds and Congo’s secret loans with China are recent examples. To
qualify for the IMF rescue, Congo instituted reforms to improve
transparency in the management of public resources, particularly in its
traditionally opaque oil sector.
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