The government agency said Wednesday it's seeking to introduce a debt anchor that is pegged at 55 percent of the GDP. The new debt anchor will, therefore, allow more borrowing to finance the budget deficit.
"By putting a debt anchor, we will manage our debt in a sustainable manner that conforms with guidelines set by the International Monetary Fund on debt limit and reduce the risk of default," Monica Asuna, the director of Planning at the National Treasury and Economic Planning, said in a statement issued in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya.
The institution is currently taking the proposed amendment through public participation before it is forwarded to Parliament for debate and passage into law.
According to Njuguna Ndung'u, the cabinet secretary for the National Treasury and Economic Planning, if the law is not changed, the ministry would have to write to Parliament every time the threshold is exceeded.
Kenya's debt stock stood at 68 billion dollars at the end of January. Ndung'u said Kenya thus needs to amend the debt law to enable it to meet its debt obligations and finance its budget deficit.
On April 18, Kenya kicked off a plan to raise funds in the international market through a sovereign bond in the financial year 2023/2024 which is expected to raise the public debt stock.
The money raised would be used to offset a 2-billion-dollar Eurobond that would be done in June 2024.
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