Treasury Building in Nairobi. Photo/FILE
In Summary
- MPs again pushed it to Sh2.5 trillion in December last year, raising concern from analysts and the Opposition that government borrowing was unsustainable.
- According to Treasury Cabinet Secretary Henry Rotich, growth of external debt is attributed to the recent floating of an international sovereign bond worth Sh176 billion.
- “The success of the sovereign bond helped to consolidate macro-economic stability by strengthening the shilling, stabilising import prices and reducing the cost of living,” Mr Rotich said in his remarks.
The
Annual Public Debt Report released in December last year, shows that the
debt to gross domestic product (GDP) has been growing steadily since
June 2013 from Sh1.8 trillion or 42 per cent of the GDP to Sh2.4
trillion last year, (47.9 per cent).
DEBT CEILING RAISED
In 2013, the debt ceiling was raised by the National Assembly from Sh800 billion to Sh1.2 trillion.
MPs
again pushed it to Sh2.5 trillion in December last year, raising
concern from analysts and the Opposition that government borrowing was
unsustainable.
Kenya requires at least Sh5.7 trillion
to fund mega projects, including the Sh327 billion standard gauge
railway, Lamu Port and South Sudan Ethiopia Transport project,
generation of 5,000MW of power, the Galana Irrigation Scheme and the
crude oil pipeline from Turkana to Lamu.
Other
initiatives are the Northern Corridor integration projects, the second
container terminal and berth, power transmission lines and the
tarmacking of 10,000 kilometres of roads.
According to
Treasury Cabinet Secretary Henry Rotich, growth of external debt is
attributed to the recent floating of an international sovereign bond
worth Sh176 billion.
“The success of the sovereign bond
helped to consolidate macro-economic stability by strengthening the
shilling, stabilising import prices and reducing the cost of living,” Mr
Rotich said in his remarks.
At 47.9 per cent of the
GDP, the public debt is above the 45 per cent Treasury threshold and so
is the overall fiscal deficit, which stands at eight per cent against a
target of below 5 per cent.
However, Mr Rotich said the debt analysis for Kenya indicates that it is sustainable over the medium term.
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