The Central Bank of Kenya (CBK) has revised the outlook for
diaspora remittances from an annual dip of 12.3 percent to a growth of
one percent, buoyed by the recovery in the last two months despite
Covid-19.
CBK governor Patrick Njoroge said Thursday in
a post- Monetary Policy Committee meeting brief that that the strong
recovery, especially in June, shows that 12-month remittances are likely
to grow by at least one percent from last year’s Sh301.2 billion
($2.796 billion).
This is a reversal from earlier
projection by the financial regulator that the diaspora remittances were
going to drop by 12.3 percent or Sh37 billion, which was based on fears
that Kenyans living and working abroad would run into financial
difficulties due to Covid-19.
“We have seen a
continuation of the trend that was there (pre-Covid-19) after the dip we
saw three months ago. We have revised our projection for the
remittances to one percent increase,” said Dr Njoroge.
Kenya’s
remittances recovered sharply in June to Sh31 billion ($288 million) --
the second highest inflow in a single month-- after the sharp dip in
April as coronavirus continued to hit the world economy.
The CBK revision differs sharply with the average dip of about
20 percent that World Bank projects to hit combined remittances across
the world.
The World Bank outlook is majorly pegged on
the fact that Covid-19 has disrupted economic activities and sparked
salary cuts and job losses across the globe.
The CBK
has also revised its outlook for Kenya’s current account deficit from
5.8 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) to 5.1 percent by the end of
the year, citing among other things the expected recovery in
remittances and exports.
The deficit contracted by 20
basis points—from 5.2 percent in the 12-months to May to five percent in
June—driven by lower oil imports and improved exports of tea and
horticulture as well as the rise in remittances.
“The
narrowing of current deficit portents to stability in the foreign
exchange market and we expect to see this sustained,” said Dr Njoroge.
The
Kenya shilling has been under pressure in recent months, depreciating
by 6.3 percent against the dollar since January. The local currency
touched a record low of 108.13 last week Thursday.
“This is what the market is saying and all we want to do is to minimise volatility,” said Dr Njoroge.
With forex reserves of $9.35 billion or 5.67 months import cover, CBK maintains this is adequate to deal with volatility.
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