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Summary
The Health ministry and
Department of Social Protection gobbled up nearly two-thirds of the
development expenditure in April after the Treasury cancelled funding to
low-priority projects as it mobilised cash to fight the spread of the
global coronavirus pandemic.
Disbursement to capital
projects in the first full month Kenya went into partial trade lockdowns
and travel restrictions fell to the lowest level since the Jubilee
administration took power in mid-2013, according to Exchequer statistics
published by the Treasury.
Some Sh14.17 billion was
channelled into projects undertaken by State ministries, departments and
agencies (MDAs) in April, a drop of Sh7.21 billion from a month earlier
and Sh3.95 billion a year ago.
Development expenditure
by the Health ministry, which was racing to put in place infrastructure
to contain the spread of the contagious virus, amounted to Sh5.62
billion or 38.6 percent of the total development spend.
Funding
of projects by the ministry from the Exchequer started rising in
February when it was tasked to equip the 120-bed Covid-19 isolation
centre at Nairobi county-run Mbagathi Hospital, a unit which was
initially set to be a maternity wing.
Afya House’s
project expenditure bumped up from Sh2.26 billion in January to Sh4.84
billion in February, Sh4.57 billion in March, and touching the highest
pole in April since the onset of devolution that transferred most
healthcare services to the counties.
The Social
Protection Department, tasked with affairs of the elderly and other
vulnerable groups in the society, was on the other hand, given Sh3.997
billion or more than a quarter of the total capital funds disbursement
in April.
The elderly are seen as the most vulnerable in the fight against
the global pandemic partly due to their low body immunity, with
President Uhuru Kenyatta directing public servants aged 58 and above to
take leave from work stations.
The State has also said
that it is sending the poor in some of the slums in Nairobi cash through
their mobile phones (the handouts fall under recurrent expenditure).
The
Health ministry, which is in charge of protocols for stemming the
spread of the virus and its alleviating attendant shocks, has in recent
months been under sharp public scrutiny over expenditure of cash it has
received to fight the global Covid-19 pandemic from taxpayers and
donors.
Health secretary Mutahi Kagwe in May
transferred up to 30 officials largely procurement, accounting and
supply chain managers in what he termed part of the process to dismantle
cartels at the ministry, opening up a legal battle with a few of the
redeployed managers.
“This (Afya House) building here
has got its fair share of criminals. Like any other market, there are a
few mad cases in here, and we will unearth them,” Mr Kagwe pledged on
May 27.
Amid reduction in tax receipts to Sh120.1
billion from Sh140.41 billion in the same month last year, the biggest
receivers of capital cash such as the Infrastructure department and
Energy ministry did not get allocation during the month.
Overall
business deals dipped to 34.8 in April from 37.5 a month earlier, 49.0
in February and 49.7 in the first month of the year, according to a
closely watched monthly survey based on feedback from corporate managers
in key sectors of the economy.
Readings below 50.0 in
the Stanbic Bank Kenya’s Purchasing Managers Index (PMI), a measure of
monthly private sector activity, signal contraction in business
conditions.
April’s PMI reading was just shy of the
record low of 34.4 reported in October 2017, a month when the country
underwent a tense historic repeat presidential poll which was boycotted
by the opposition.
The downturn eased slightly in May,
coming in at 36.7 after austerities such as pay cuts helped ease
corporate operating costs for the first time in more than five years.
Depressed
private sector deals usually cut corporate profit and hurt job
opportunities, resulting in reduced corporation and payroll tax payments
— which form more than half of government revenue sources — the main
government revenue.
“Business conditions have
contracted for five consecutive months now. In fact, the employment
sub-index fell by the sharpest level in May since data collection began.
“Consequently,
the reduction in the workforce has cut overall input prices for private
sector firms,” Jibran Qureishi, the immediate former Stanbic Bank’s
regional economist for global markets and now the bank’s chief
researcher for Africa, said in the PMI statement early June.
“Furthermore, due to weak domestic demand conditions, firms have looked to reduce overall output prices too.”
Kenya
has, however, since April gotten approvals for loans upwards of
Sh215.24 billion from multilateral development lenders whose facilities
come with low interest rates and generous payment terms.
The
loans, which are aimed at bridging budget deficit and supporting
socio-economic programmes to alleviate the Covid-19 pandemic shocks,
helped replace the Sh200 billion that the Treasury had earlier budgeted
to tap from commercial lenders — syndicated loans and Eurobonds.
The
inflows comprises $1 billion from the World Bank Group, $739 million
from International Monetary Fund, African Development Bank (€188
million) and European Union (€ 65 million).
The
Treasury in April also raised its domestic debt rollover goal to
Sh222.58 billion from initial Sh122.58 billion, giving investors the
option to extend the tenure of maturing securities amounting to about
Sh100 billion.
This happened after the international
financial markets shut the door on emerging economies such as Kenya
because of elevated risks amid uncertainties around global coronavirus
pandemic shocks.
“The (Kenyan) authorities should
undertake independent audits of samples of crisis mitigation spending
and publish the results of these audits,” the IMF wrote on April 30 in
the report that followed approval of Sh78.64 billion for Kenya.
“They
should publish documentation on related procurement contracts on the
government’s website, together with ex-post validation of delivery along
with the name of awarded companies and the name of their beneficial
owners.”
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