A staff team from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), led by Haimanot
Teferra, visited Nairobi during October 30 – November 15, 2023, and held
discussions with the Kenyan authorities for the 2023 Article IV
Consultation, the sixth reviews of Kenya’s economic program supported by
the IMF’s
Extended Fund Facility
(EFF) and
Extended Credit Facility
(ECF), and the first Review under the
Resilience Sustainability Facility
(RSF). The EFF/ECF arrangements were approved by the IMF Executive Board on
April 2, 2021 and extended by 10 months on July 17, 2023 (see
Press Release
Nos.
21/98
and 23/171)
to support Kenya in maintaining robust and inclusive growth while
preserving macroeconomic stability and debt sustainability. The SDR407.1
million RSF was approved by the IMF Executive Board on July 17, 2023 (see
Press Release No
23/171
) to support Kenya’s ambitious efforts to build resilience to climate
change.
The mission also considered Kenya’s request for augmentation under the
EFF/ECF arrangements. If approved by the Executive Board of IMF, including
augmentations, the EFF/ECF arrangements would provide access to a total
amount of SDR2.93 billion (about US$3.88 billion at current exchange rate).
Under the EFF/ECF augmentations and the RSF support, the total IMF
commitment under these arrangements over the duration of the program would
be SDR3.34 billion (about US$4.43 billion).
At the conclusion of the mission, Ms. Teferra issued the following
statement:
“I am pleased to announce that the IMF team and the Kenyan authorities have
reached staff-level agreement on (i) the sixth reviews of Kenya’s economic
program under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and Extended Credit Facility
(ECF) arrangements; (ii) an augmentation of access under the EFF/ECF
totaling 130.3 percent of quota SDR 707.3 million, about US$938 million);
and (iii) the first review of the RSF.
“The agreement is subject to IMF management approval and consideration by
the Executive Board, which is expected in January 2024. Upon completion of
the sixth reviews by the IMF Executive Board, Kenya would have immediate
access to SDR 514.48 million (about US$682.3 million), including from the
augmentation of access under the EFF/ECF arrangements (SDR469.25 million)
and first review of RSF (SDR45.23 million). This would bring total IMF
financial support disbursed under the EFF/ECF and RSF arrangements to
SDR2.02 billion (about US$2.68 billion).
“The tightening global financing conditions for frontier economies and
global geopolitical tensions are compounding the challenges from the legacy
of the pandemic and multi-season drought, further straining Kenya’s balance
of payments and fiscal financing requirements. The authorities’ strong
reform program aims to enhance macroeconomic stability and restore
confidence to ensure access to the international bond markets.
“The economy has displayed resilience, with real GDP expanding by 5.4
percent in the first half of 2023, primarily due to a robust recovery in
the agriculture sector following the return of rains. In the fiscal year
2022/23, the primary deficit came in as expected at 0.6 percent of GDP,
reflecting tight expenditure management in light of tax revenue shortfalls.
Financing conditions continue to be challenging. With a tightening of
monetary policy in June, and tighter liquidity conditions, yields on
government bonds have experienced a notable upward trend. The external
current account deficit has narrowed, driven by a recovery in the tourism
sector to pre-COVID-19 levels, resilience in remittances reductions in
imports and a real exchange rate depreciation. Headline inflation has
fallen within the target range of 2.5–7.5 percent since July.
“Despite continued commitment to the implementation of the IMF-supported
economic program which is broadly on track, uncertainty looms over Kenya’s
effective access to international bond markets. This uncertainty is
exerting substantial pressure on liquidity, primarily due to the sizeable
Eurobond maturing in 2024. Against this backdrop, the authorities are
actively mobilizing additional financing from their development partners,
the IMF, and commercial sources while concurrently intensifying their
efforts to enhance macroeconomic policies and implement structural reforms.
“Steadfast implementation of a package of mutually reinforcing policies
remains key to sustain macroeconomic stability, anchor market confidence,
continue to deliver on the program’s objectives, and bolster Kenya’s
medium-term prospects. A tighter fiscal stance is envisaged under the
program to help reduce debt vulnerabilities and achieve a PV debt/GDP of 55
percent, the authorities’ debt anchor, by 2029. This will entail timely
implementation of reforms to broaden the domestic tax base and improve tax
compliance. These are critical for achieving the authorities’ revenue
objectives of reversing the trajectory of the tax revenue-to-GDP ratio
while promoting equity and fairness in the tax regime. Expenditure
rationalization will need to continue, with a focus on enhanced efficiency
of public investments, better targeting of subsidies and transfers,
addressing weakness in state corporations, and digital delivery of public
services. The social safety nets and fiscal risk management framework need
to be further enhanced.
“The mission welcomed the Central Bank of Kenya’s (CBK’s) steps to
modernize the monetary policy framework and improve the functioning of the
FX market. The recent introduction of an interest rate corridor centered
around the policy rate, aimed at guiding the interbank rate, is anticipated
to enhance the transmission of monetary policy. Additionally, initiatives
like the DhowCSD and other policy adjustments are expected to stimulate
interbank repos, potentially minimizing market fragmentation. Further
efforts to improve the functioning of the FX market and greater exchange
rate flexibility would reduce the costs to the real economy from large
spreads and excess FX demand, while encouraging capital inflows and
reducing outflows. Credible and mutually reinforcing policies would help
maintain favorable inflation differentials with trading partners, boost
export competitiveness, and mitigate balance of payments pressures.
Efforts, including to strengthen macroprudential policy framework will be
key to reduce financial sector risks.
“On the upside, should investor confidence recover fully, a virtuous cycle
of inflows could stabilize the exchange rate and bring down inflation
faster than expected. An enhanced rebound in agriculture could bolster
growth, help reduce inflation further, while earlier than expected market
access would ease financing constraints. Further progress with reforms that
improve the business environment, and that support a market and rules-based
economy would reinforce this upside risk. On the domestic front, the key
downside risk is that the policy shift now underway, if it loses its
momentum, could erode confidence and lead to increased FX demand and
further pressures on the exchange rate. Key downside risks from external
shocks in the form of higher commodity prices, a slowdown in trading
partners’ demand, and a worsening of external financing conditions could
weigh on the prospects of rebuilding external buffers.
“Progress on the climate agenda under the RSF remains strong. Fast-tracking
the reforms will also create a conducive environment for attracting climate
finance.
“The Article IV discussions complemented the program by focusing on
assessing Kenya’s public sector balance sheet, benchmarking its revenue
performance to peers, exchange rate passthrough to inflation and examining
medium-term structural issues related to export competitiveness. Responses
to near-term challenges should be complemented by actions to anchor
confidence and improve medium-term prospects for growth, export
competitiveness, governance and the anti-corruption framework for an
inclusive, green, and vibrant economy.
“The staff team is grateful to the authorities for their hospitality and
candid and constructive discussions and reaffirms the IMF’s support for the
government’s efforts to implement its economic reform agenda.”