logo
Kenya's budget to weigh revenue growth against public outrage

Kenya's budget to weigh revenue growth against public outrage

Reutersa day ago

NAIROBI, June 12 (Reuters) - Kenya's finance minister will present a budget on Thursday aimed at boosting revenues to service debt while avoiding tax measures that triggered the kind of deadly protests that rocked East Africa's biggest economy last year.
President William Ruto's administration has been struggling to narrow the fiscal deficit and govern under a heavy total debt-to-GDP ratio of around two-thirds, well above the 55% level considered a sustainable threshold.
The government is seeking new sources of funding after last year's countrywide protests forced it to pursue austerity measures and scrap planned tax hikes worth more than 346 billion Kenyan shillings ($2.7 billion).
"Kenyans cannot bear more tax," Finance Minister John Mbadi said on Wednesday. "For the first time, we have not added taxes in the current finance bill as has been the case before."
Critics have accused the government of using the budget to increase indirect taxes and infringe on privacy by empowering the tax authority to spy on people's bank accounts and mobile money transactions. But Mbadi said on Wednesday the revenue authority must be empowered to collect taxes to run the country.
In place of hiking individual taxes, Mbadi is looking to widen the tax base, improve compliance and cut spending, said John Kuria, a tax specialist and partner at Kody Africa.
"They understand that people are not very happy, especially with the government and how the taxes are being used," Kuria said.
Despite government attempts to tighten expenditure and crack down on fraud, "I think we're still going to have a significant funding shortfall," he said.
While the proposed budget outlines credible measures to reduce the fiscal deficit, the challenge lies in implementation, which Kenya has struggled with historically, said Shani Smit-Lengton, Senior Economist at Oxford Economics Africa.
This often results in mid-year revisions through supplementary budgets, which erode fiscal credibility, Smit-Lengton told Reuters via email.
Kenya said in March it had applied for a new lending programme from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) after abandoning the final review on the previous IMF programme.
In February it joined a fast-growing club of African nations that have gone to the market to borrow cash to pay off maturing debts in a bid to smooth out liabilities and ring-fence critical expenditures like health.
"This year, the stakes are higher: the government must demonstrate improved budget discipline to bolster its case for a new IMF programme, while also managing public sentiment to avoid social unrest.
"Achieving this balance will be critical to maintaining both investor confidence and domestic stability," Smit-Lengton said, adding that the government's target of reducing the fiscal deficit to 4.5% in the next financial year was overly optimistic.
($1 = 129.0000 Kenyan shillings)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Beloved cafe serving loyal customers classic English breakfasts for nine years is forced to close due to cost of living
Beloved cafe serving loyal customers classic English breakfasts for nine years is forced to close due to cost of living

Scottish Sun

time5 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Beloved cafe serving loyal customers classic English breakfasts for nine years is forced to close due to cost of living

The owner thanked customers for the "wonderful journey" TEATIME'S OVER Beloved cafe serving loyal customers classic English breakfasts for nine years is forced to close due to cost of living A BELOVED cafe that served customers classic English breakfasts for nine years has been forced to close due to the cost of living. The owner said it is "impossible to carry on" in the current climate. Advertisement 2 The traditional cafe served big English breakfasts for nine yearss Traditional cafe Deb's Diner in Birmingham posted the sad update on Facebook. "It is with great sadness that Deb's Diner has closed it doors for the very last time. "Due to ill health and the current cost of living crisis, it has become impossible to carry on so we have decided not to renew our lease. "We would like to thank all of our customers for their continued support over the last nine years, it's been a wonderful journey." Advertisement Customers commented to express their sadness and to send best wishes. It comes after the Chancellor's hike to national insurance contributions and minimum wage for firms kicked in at the start of April. The NI rise has hit investment, recruitment and prices. Businesses were dealt the £25 billion 'Jobs tax' raid at the Budget with the increased contributions as confidence among entrepreneurs taking a hit. Advertisement From April 6, businesses have to pay a higher rate of employer National Insurance contributions (NICs) of 15% from 13.8%. The threshold at which they are paid is also being lowered from £9,100 to £5,000. The Government confirmed it was making the changes in its Autumn Budget last October in a bid to increase revenue. It also said the move meant it wasn't increasing taxes for working people. Advertisement However, it will have an impact on shoppers and everyday consumers as businesses look to pass on the additional costs. Figures show that almost a third of businesses affected by the hike are planning to cut jobs or freeze hiring. It comes on the back of 160,000 part-time retail jobs are on the cusp of going in the next two years due to a rise in Labour costs. 2 Rachel Reeves, Chancellor of the Exchequer, after presenting her Spending Review Credit: Alamy

Captain Kemi needs ‘an army' but business not yet keen to follow her over the top
Captain Kemi needs ‘an army' but business not yet keen to follow her over the top

Telegraph

time6 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Captain Kemi needs ‘an army' but business not yet keen to follow her over the top

There was not much headroom, fiscal or otherwise, as the Tory leader spoke on the economy in the cramped basement of a City hotel. The ceiling was low but Kemi Badenoch's hopes were high as she addressed a conference of bankers who seemed under-enthused by the Chancellor's spending review. Tax Freedom Day, the point of the year when we stop working for the Exchequer, had just dawned, six days later than last year, and there was little sign of relief. The Institute for Fiscal Studies warned that Rachel Reeves was a 'gnat's whisker' away from having to hike taxes and most gnats are asking for the No 1 clippers these days. Add the grim news of GDP falling by 0.3 per cent in April, and the Chancellor's breakfast media round had been like someone trying to sing Good Vibrations to the tune of Beethoven's Funeral March. Speaking from a hospital surrounded by diagnostic equipment (all wisely unplugged to avoid images of flatlining) Reeves insisted she is 'determined' to deliver growth and that GDP is 'volatile'. This is the same Reeves who demanded an emergency Budget in 2022, when GDP fell by 0.1 per cent on the Tory watch. It was not a bad time, therefore, for a Conservative to remind those in the City who their friends are. Badenoch had come to play FTSE with financiers, but she began with a nostra culpa. She admitted the Tories had left a ropey economy – blame Covid, blame Putin, blame the Treasury, don't blame me – 'but it was not this bad'. Productivity, she added, was 'stuck in first gear' and London was experiencing the greatest exodus of wealth of any city save Moscow. She pronounced it the American way to rhyme with cow. Labour don't 'get' business because hardly any of them have a background in it, she added, which may be true but only one of the Beach Boys knew how to surf. Reform, she contended, was running a scam. 'No one is making the argument for business any more except me and my party,' she said. 'Business is a good, in and of itself, and it pays for everything.' Especially, she hoped, at that night's Tory donors' summer party. Their tummies suitably tickled, Badenoch then returned to bashing the Government, saying that borrowing is so high there is a 'significant risk of a death spiral' and that Labour is pessimistically pursuing a path of managed decline, exacerbated by a compliance culture that strangles innovation. So far so punchy, but what would she do better? Badenoch's shirt cuffs were unbuttoned but she had little up her sleeves. Her opposition to VAT on school fees was reprised and she promised to 'reverse changes to APR and BPR' (agricultural and business property relief), thus giving CPR to the economy. Beyond that, she had nothing. It is, to be fair, early in the parliament for policy. What she most wants now are allies ('Quite frankly, we need an army.') 'I'm on your side,' she told them, 'but I need you to be on mine too. You can't sit back and hope that someone else is coming along to fix this. You need to speak up. Don't just wait for other politicians to do it. You need to get on the pitch too.' Building to her conclusion with a plea for ideas, Captain Kemi hit a poetic, if metrically flawed, note. 'Back us, put your name to the cause,' she said, 'for we're not going to turn the country around with quiet applause.' She then left the stage to quiet applause. The pin-striped army liked her tone, but they are not quite ready to follow her over the top.

Households face council tax hikes and £10billion stealth levies as Reeves gets boxed into corner by shrinking economy
Households face council tax hikes and £10billion stealth levies as Reeves gets boxed into corner by shrinking economy

Scottish Sun

time8 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Households face council tax hikes and £10billion stealth levies as Reeves gets boxed into corner by shrinking economy

Economists warned the circumstances meant tax hikes are almost certain this autumn GOGGLE-BOXED IN Households face council tax hikes and £10billion stealth levies as Reeves gets boxed into corner by shrinking economy HOUSEHOLDS face council tax hikes and £10billion in stealth levies as Rachel Reeves gets boxed into a corner by the shrinking economy, experts warn. The Chancellor, who wore protective goggles during a visit to the University of Derby yesterday, learned growth fell 0.3 per cent in April — less than 24 hours after her £113billion spending review splurge. Advertisement 2 Rachel Reeves wears protective goggles during a visit to the University of Derby Credit: Simon Walker / HM Treasury 2 Households face council tax hikes and £10billion in stealth levies Credit: Getty Businesses are reeling from the National Insurance rise, a jump in the minimum wage and ongoing uncertainty over Donald Trump's global trade war. Economists warned the circumstances meant tax hikes are almost certain this autumn — along with hard-pressed town halls having to up council tax rates by five per cent next year to pay for local services. Former Office for Budget Responsibility committee member Andy King said 'the writing was on the wall for another fiscal hole' — which would trigger tax rises or possible spending cuts in the Budget. Another expert accused Ms Reeves of 'making up numbers' in her spending review as there were few clues where savings would be found. Advertisement READ MORE ON SPENDING REVIEW TAX BLOW Council tax bills to rise at fastest rate in 20 years after Reeves' review Paul Johnson, from the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said her demands that all Whitehall departments cut administration budgets by ten per cent a year were not the result of a 'serious analysis'. He also said that if Ms Reeves was forced to raise taxes, the most politically straightforward approach would be to extend the freeze on income tax thresholds. Mr Johnson added that her plans will result in a 'sting in the tail' because local authorities would have to raise their levies. More than half of Brits — 52 per cent — reckon Ms Reeves' spending review will have a negative economic impact rather than positive. Advertisement But one piece of good news did emerge yesterday, as it was revealed the UK was finally ready to sign its trade deal with the US.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store