Summary
- MPs said the move is against the earlier commitment to reduce domestic borrowing in funding budget deficits.
- They say domestic borrowing will deny Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) access to cheap loans in their efforts to remain afloat amid the coronavirus pandemic.
- Treasury Secretary Ukur Yatani said that he intends to borrow Sh473.6 billion from the local market and Sh349.7 billion from the foreign market for development projects.
Parliament has faulted the National Treasury’s move to ramp up
its local borrowing, saying that it will lock out small businesses from
cheap loans.
In its review of the 2020/21 budget
proposed by Treasury Secretary Ukur Yatani, lawmakers said the move is
against the earlier commitment to reduce domestic borrowing in funding
budget deficits.
The Budget and Appropriations
committee chaired by Kikuyu legislator Kimani Ichung’wa said that this
will deny Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) access to cheap loans in
their efforts to remain afloat amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Mr
Yatani said that he intends to borrow Sh473.6 billion from the local
market and Sh349.7 billion from the foreign market for development
projects.
This means that domestic borrowing will rise
by 20.98 per cent from the Sh391.45 billion targeted by Treasury for the
current year.
The borrowing is part of Mr Yatani’s bid to bridge an estimated
budgeting deficit that stands at 7.3 percent of the country’s GDP as the
country takes a hit from the coronavirus pandemic. “This trend is
contrary to the previous undertaking by the National Treasury to ensure
that there is reduced domestic borrowing as well as targeting cheaper
financing from multilateral and bilateral sources…,” the committee said
in the review of the 2020/21 budget.
The policy to
borrow more from the local banks comes even as SMEs remain one of the
hardest hit by the economic disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.
A
survey conducted by the Central Bank in Kenya showed that more that 75
per cent of SMEs would collapse if they did not get funds by end of this
month. Mr Yatani said Sh904.7 billion will be used to service debt in
the year starting July at a time ordinary revenue is seen falling due to
tax cuts and reliefs adopted in April to cushion Kenyans from the
pandemic and economic disruptions.
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