Kenya is among countries
struggling to keep pace with debt
repayment, according to the United
Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD).
The UN trade body says efforts
by multilateral bodies like the
World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) to help the
countries restructure their fiscal
policies is not yielding fruit.
The comment comes just days
after Kenya agreed with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to
terminate the ninth review under
the current Extended Fund Facility
and Extended Credit Facility programmes started in 2021.
Addressing the 14th International
Debt Management Conference that
concluded in Geneva on Wednesday, UNCTAD Secretary-General
Rebeca Grynspan urged reforms to
prevent the current debt crisis from
derailing progress.
“Behind us lies a system that needs reform; before us, the chance
to build one that serves people and
stability, long-term development,
not recurring default,” Grynspan
said in her opening remarks.
In 2024, developing countries’
external debt hit a record $11.4
trillion, or 99 per cent of their
export earnings.
International Development Association (IDA), the soft loan affiliate
of the World Bank, which helps the
world’s poorest countries, ranked
Kenya fourth with high-interest
payments as a share of export
earnings.
Data released by IDA in
December reveals Mozambique
led the rankings with 38.3 per cent,
followed by Senegal at 25.9 per
cent, and Pakistan at 13.6 per cent.
Kenya narrowly surpassed Dominica, which recorded 10.3 per cent.
Kenya’s debt service costs on
external debt more than doubled in
2024, rising from Sh403 billion to
Sh839 billion.
This sharp increase
was attributed in part to the maturity of the Eurobond 2024.
Kenya’s rising debt obligations
have raised concerns about the
country’s fiscal stability, as increasing resources are allocated to debt
servicing at the expense of vital
development needs.
UNCTAD boss regretted that
instead of financing essential infrastructure, education and healthcare,
rising debt burdens are forcing governments into difficult trade-offs.
Currently, some 3.3 billion
people live in countries that spend
more on debt servicing than on
either health or education. Interest payments outweigh climate investments in almost all developing
countries, limiting their ability to
respond to global challenges.
“This forces countries to choose
to default on their development to
not default on their debt. No more
defaults on debt but yes on development,” Grynspan warned.
The message from the 14th
International Debt Management
Conference was clear: Urgent
reforms are needed to ensure debt
serves as a tool for progress, rather
than a barrier.