City
Epaper

IMF approves reviews for Kenya to receive 606 million USD

By IANS | Updated: October 31, 2024 17:50 IST

Nairobi, Oct 31 The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said its executive board has approved the seventh and eighth ...

Open in App

Nairobi, Oct 31 The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said its executive board has approved the seventh and eighth reviews of Kenya's program, allowing the East African nation to receive 606 million US dollars.

The funds will support Kenya's efforts to rebuild fiscal and external buffers as well as enhance resilience to climate shocks, the IMF said in a statement issued Wednesday evening.

The loan facility, which will be disbursed immediately, would bring the IMF's total funding under the existing Extended Fund Facility (EFF) and Extended Credit Facility (ECF) arrangements to 3.61 billion dollars.

IMF First Deputy Managing Director Gita Gopinath said Kenya's economy remains resilient, with growth above the regional average, inflation decelerating, and external inflows supporting the shilling and a buildup of external buffers, despite a difficult socioeconomic environment.

"Given the elevated risks around the fiscal strategy, policymaking needs to be agile," she said. "Contingency planning remains critical, with policies adapting to evolving outcomes to safeguard stability and ensure that program objectives continue to be met."

The IMF said the resolution of the exceptional external financing pressure earlier this year has revived market confidence, aided the stabilization of the shilling, and enabled a faster buildup of foreign exchange reserves, Xinhua news agency reported.

It, however, said that large revenue shortfalls in the 2023/2024 fiscal year and pushbacks against revenue measures owing to governance concerns pose a challenge to the ongoing fiscal consolidation efforts.

The Kenyan authorities face a difficult balancing act of boosting domestic revenues to protect critical spending in priority areas while meeting heavy debt service obligations.

It said delivering on this would call for improving governance and transparency to restore public trust in the effective use of public resources.

Gopinath said a difficult adjustment path lies ahead, noting that a credible fiscal consolidation strategy remains central to addressing debt vulnerabilities while protecting social and development spending.

She said reforms to make the tax regime more efficient, equitable, and progressive as well as strengthening accountability, transparency, and efficiency of public finances, will help garner political and societal support.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalPak troops resort to unprovoked firing on J&K LoC, Indian Army retaliates

CricketChina serious about winning gold at LA Olympics: Former Australia captain Steve Waugh

BusinessCentre launches portal, guidelines for electronics component manufacturing scheme; aims for large investments

InternationalNorth Korea denounces Japan PM's offering to war shrine

InternationalIran port explosion: Death toll rises to 8, over 750 injured

Business Realted Stories

BusinessMillions benefited from Ayushman health cards, now is the time for Delhi: Hardeep Puri

BusinessViksit Bharat will be driven by start-ups and innovation: IIT Madras Director

BusinessIndia sees robust 10.35 pc annual growth in domestic airline passengers in FY25

BusinessSwiggi Instamart to create dedicated 'cooperative' category on its platform, signs MoU

BusinessIDFC FIRST Bank posts nearly 60 pc net profit loss at Rs 295.6 crore in Q4 FY25