China now owns more than 70% of Kenya’s external debt

China now owns more than 70% of Kenya’s external debt

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GENEROUS FRIEND?
China now owns more than 70% of Kenya’s external debt
By Abdi Latif Dahir

6 hours ago
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Friends in need.


Kenya’s public debt load recently surpassed the 5 trillion shillings mark ($50 billion), renewing questions over the government’s borrowing binge, how it would show the proceeds in terms of economic growth, and whether it could repay these loans in the long run.

Much of that lending has come from China in recent years, but new data shows that Kenya’s obligations to Beijing go much deeper than many ordinary Kenyans realize. China is now by far Kenya’s largest lenderaccounting for 72% of bilateral debt by the end of March, according to documents from the Treasury obtained by Kenya’s Business Daily newspaper.

That is a 15-percentage point surge in total debt from 2016 when China accounted for 57% of Kenya’s external debt. That figure is also eight times more than what the next lending partner, France, gave to Kenya.

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Over the last few years, officials in Nairobi have defended the borrowing spree, saying it was part of efforts toupgrade infrastructural investment, expand energy options and distribution, and improve transportation systems. The growing access to Chinese funding also points to developing Sino-Kenyan relations, with the government looking to access easy loans with fewer strings attached.

In early May, Kenya was also the latest nation to join the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, a China-led financier that offers credit by dropping the conditionality on deregulation, privatization, and reforms that come with aid from Western-led multilateral agencies like the IMF. Kenya was also one of 14 African states that recently met in the Zimbabwean capital Harare to discuss whether to hold the yuan as part of their foreign reserves—pointing to China’s growing muscle as a global financial power.

Critics, however, argue that increased lending from China will only encourage dependency and could have the potential of entrapping nations in debt. The Chinese “have become adept at colluding with cabinet secretaries and heads of parastatals into signing opaque commercial agreements that end up saddling our external debt register with expensive loans,” Jaindi Kisero, a columnist with the Kenyan paper, Daily Nation, wrote in May.

The rising debt levels in Kenya are already causing concerns globally too. In February, global rating agency Moody’s downgraded Kenya’s ratingowing to rise in debt levels and deterioration in debt affordability. The International Monetary Fund alsostopped Kenya’s access to a $1.5 billion standby credit facility due to non-compliance with fiscal targets. The IMF urged Kenya to lower its deficits and put the country’s debt onto a “sustainable path.” All this happens as Kenya is roiled by a spate of corruption scandals involving government officialswho allegedly siphoned tens of millions of dollars from state coffers using fake tenders and suppliers.

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China now owns more than 70% of Kenya’s external debt
 
One belt, One road.
Kenya is the only country in Africa included (not sure about Ethiopia).
China is willing to spend on these countries.

Projects like SGR would have been funded by the World Bank in 2040. Or worse we go the Tanzania route which is building 'na pesa yao' and will have the project complete in 2050.

China is funding development in Kenya as a matter of international urgency.
 
One belt, One road.
Kenya is the only country in Africa included (not sure about Ethiopia).
China is willing to spend on these countries.

Projects like SGR would have been funded by the World Bank in 2040. Or worse we go the Tanzania route which is building 'na pesa yao' and will have the project complete in 2050.

China is funding development in Kenya as a matter of international urgency.
Nasikia reli yenu wanaimiliki wao..

Halahala tusije kusikia pia wanamiliki bandari Mombasa..
 
One belt, One road.
Kenya is the only country in Africa included (not sure about Ethiopia).
China is willing to spend on these countries.

Projects like SGR would have been funded by the World Bank in 2040. Or worse we go the Tanzania route which is building 'na pesa yao' and will have the project complete in 2050.

China is funding development in Kenya as a matter of international urgency.
Hahaha humjui mchina wewe!
 
Does it matter who owns it? What matters is our external debt is 28% od GDP while Tanzania external debt is 36% of GDP. Who owns it doesn't matter, what matters is we'll all have to pay it.
 
Does it matter who owns it? What matters is our external debt is 28% od GDP while Tanzania external debt is 36% of GDP. Who owns it doesn't matter, what matters is we'll all have to pay it.
Evidence?

Tanzania Government Debt to GDP
Tanzania recorded a government debt equivalent to 37.40 percent of the country's Gross Domestic Product in 2017. Government Debt to GDP in Tanzania averaged 34.92 percent from 2001 until 2017, reaching an all time high of 50.20 percent in 2001 and a record low of 21.50 percent in 2008.

Tanzania Government Debt to GDP | 2001-2018 | Data | Chart | Calendar
 
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