Kenya contracted $704.99 million (Sh70.55 billion) fresh loans from China, helping Beijing regain its position from World Bank Group as the single-largest creditor.
Latest Treasury data shows the stock of debt from China hit $6.2 billion (Sh620.60 billion) as at the end of last year from $5.50 billion in September, consolidating the East Asian country’s influence on Nairobi’s infrastructure projects.
Loans from World Bank’s International Development Association and International Fund for Agricultural Development, which
Gross public debt crossed Sh5.27 trillion last year, the Treasury data further show a 15.27
“The emerging concern is that the government’s appetite for borrowing seems unlikely to wane any time soon and this could eventually push debt towards unsustainable levels,” the Budget Office — a professional unit within the National Assembly that advises MPs on financial, budgetary and economic matters — says in its latest report.
“It is important, therefore, to ensure that money accrued from debt is well
President Uhuru Kenyatta’s administration has largely procured debt from China international capital markets (Eurobond) since 2014 to build much-needed roads, bridges, power plants and the standard gauge railways.
Loans from Beijing, which come on concessional and semi-concessional terms, have seen China race past traditional multilateral creditors such as the Washington-based World Bank.
Space for Nairobi to borrow through the World Bank’s IDA’s long-term, low-cost credit window for Least Developed Countries has continued to diminish after Kenya upgraded her economy to lower middle-income status in September 2013.
This has seen Kenya increasingly rely on China and Eurobond to raise cash to bridge deficit in the annual budget, partly being driven by shortfalls in revenue.
China’s loans to Kenya between 2014 and 2018 almost tripled, rising by $3.98 billion (Sh398.32 billion) from $2.22 billion (Sh222.27 billion) in December 2014. This amounts to an average of Sh99.57 billion a year in the four-year period.
Beijing accounted for 70.71
China also accounted for every Sh23 for every Sh100 Kenya owes foreign creditors and every Sh12 for every Sh100 in total public debt.