Kenya to roll over Ksh.78B syndicated loan, cut budget deficit

Kenya is in talks with lenders to roll over a Ksh.78billion ($760million) syndicated loan this fiscal year and lengthen its maturity.

This is in order to make debt repayments more manageable, a senior Treasury official said.

The loan, which was initially for two years, was arranged by TDB bank, said Kamau Thugge, the Principal Secretary at the Ministry of Finance.

The government aimed to increase the tenor of the loan to seven or 10 years, he said, adding that they had not yet struck an agreement with lenders whom he did not identify.

“We will be going back to the international market to lengthen the maturities of the debts that are falling due. It does not increase our debt,” Thugge told reporters.

“It is just a rolling over of the syndicated loan. We are just rolling it over. There is no new debt.”

The government was however considering issuing a new Eurobond at a later date, part of efforts to raise Ksh.272billion in net external financing which is contained in this year’s budget.

“(That is) the one that we think is going to be the least costly and the one that we think we will be able to complete within this financial year,” Thugge said, without giving more details on the amount or tenor.

The East African nation’s government has ramped up borrowing and spending recently, leaving it with a fiscal deficit that peaked at 7 percent in the fiscal year ending in June, 2018.

Earlier, Thugge said in a presentation that the 2019-20 (July-June) budget deficit was expected to fall to 4.7 percent of the gross domestic product from a revised 5.8 percent this fiscal year.

The deficit was likely to drop to 2.8 percent of GDP by the 2022-23 fiscal year, he said at a public hearing on the budget.

The government was likely to spend Ksh.2.81 trillion ($27.40 billion) in the next fiscal year, up from a revised Ksh.2.47trillion in this financial year, the official said.

In October, the International Monetary Fund said Kenya’s risk of defaulting on debt repayments had increased to moderate from low, citing the government’s public investment drive and revenue shortfalls in recent years.

The National Treasury says the economy is expected to grow 6.2 percent in 2019, up from a forecast 6.0 percent this year.

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government debt Kamau Thugge

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