murchr wrote:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJayiXTTNZM
Very interesting watch. Cutting of the domestic borrowing target was prompted by the syndicated borrowing and obviously used to justifying lowering of bond yields. Inflationary pressures also appear to be easing due to base effects on food inflation (mostly), which begs the question of low the policy rate can go. I have recently learned that the food and restaurant indices have been grouped together by the Central Bank to enable core inflation to decline, which incidentally is a major component in any decision to lower the CBR. Slowing down domestic borrowing is good cos you can lower interest rates and still maintain relatively tight monetary policy. This seems to be the strategy given that we still have a structural current account deficit (i.e., exports are no more covering imports than they were last year) which may threaten the exchange rate.
The budgetary policy statements' revised recurrent expenditures are 698b (up 4%), of which defense spending is 79b (up 35%), and development expenditures are 385b (down 3%). The defense spending is worrying despite our collabo with UN forces, et al cos there's no clear timetable of when it'll end (until we're safe???). As such you have to have a compromise where development expenditure gets the smaller share of domestic resources in order to finance potential increases in national security budgets. But the problem is not funding development expenditures becoz we have $600m coming, but actually spending the funds on time and the legality of the source of funding.
So the external loans and credits act places Kenya's external debt ceiling at 800b ($9.6b at 83), which means based on our current external debt we have $1.5b to borrow before we hit the limit. Assuming you factor in $600m we're going to receive from private investors and $100 we've already received from IMF then we're left with around $800m. If the currency depreciates by 8% this year to say 90 we'll have hit the debt ceiling on revaluation alone. Our choice is therefore to get parliament to amend the ceiling upward, so that we can fund our BOP or for the government to retain high interest rates to maintain the integrity of KES. Lastly even with an amended ceiling we still have to recognise that our BOP position is supported by short term flows, which will be compromised if interest rates are lowered.
All in all if the government was confident in our ability to borrow then the real experiment is to see if they'll start paying off their overdraft at Central Bank with any surplus they've gained from domestic borrowing. This is currently not the case. Reading the recent weekly bulletin on the CBK website they indicate that about 2.5b has been paid to CBK to date on interest on the overdraft. I'd wager that this is the single biggest source of income for the CBK now despite having over +350b in foreign exchange at the Fed and in eurodollar bonds (earning close to zero).
“We are the middle children of history man, no purpose or place. We have no great war, no great depression. Our great war is a spiritual war, our great depression is our lives!" – Tyler Durden