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    Moodyโ€™s downgrades Kenyaโ€™s credit rating after Ruto scrapped controversial taxes

    Moodyโ€™s downgrades Kenyaโ€™s credit rating after Ruto scrapped controversial taxes
    Moody's offices in New York, US. IMAGE | REUTERS

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    Moodyโ€™s, a credit rating agency, has cut Kenyaโ€™s sovereign rating into junk, citing the country’s diminished capacity to pay its debts after recent protests forced President William Ruto to withdraw a controversial tax bill that would have raised billions in revenue.

    On Monday, the credit agency downgraded Kenyaโ€™s credit ratings by one level to Caa1 from B1 for local and foreign currency long-term issuer ratings and foreign-currency unsecured debt.

    After two weeks of protests, Kenya withdrew the controversial tax measures to de-escalate tensions. President Ruto proposed a 9% spending cut to the 2024/2025 budget which Moodyโ€™s said will narrow the fiscal deficit.

    Moodyโ€™s does not expect the East African nation to come up with new revenue-raising measures following the recent protests that turned deadly on June 25, leaving at least 41 people dead. The scrapped 2024 Finance Bill contained measures to raise an extra $2.7 billion to help the country manage ballooning debt and fund development programmes.

    โ€œThe downgrade of Kenya’s rating reflects significantly diminished capacity to implement revenue-based fiscal consolidation that would improve debt affordability and place debt on a downward trend,โ€ Moodyโ€™s said in a statement.

    โ€œIn particular, the government’s decision not to pursue planned tax increases and instead rely on expenditure cuts to reduce the fiscal deficit represents a significant policy shift with material implications for Kenya’s fiscal trajectory and financing needs.โ€

    While the cuts announced by Ruto are expected to improve the countryโ€™s liquidity, the credit assessor maintains that Kenyaโ€™s fiscal deficit will reduce gradually than previously projected. It expects East Africaโ€™s largest economyโ€™s debt affordability to be weaker for longer.  

    โ€œAs a result, we now expect the fiscal deficit to narrow more slowly, with Kenya’s debt affordability remaining weaker for longer. In turn, larger financing needs stemming from a wider deficit increase liquidity risk against more uncertain external funding options,โ€ Moodyโ€™s said.