With all the borrowing going on we ask ourselves...what are they using all this money on? The govt made a confession that of the 24.2b of stimulus funds only 3.25b had been spent...apparently issues with project contractors, but they're still hopeful. So why are they still borrowing more?
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http://www.businessdaily...2/-/6bbojf/-/index.html
A good thing about Treasury borrowing is that it’s getting it cheap and this is important for repayments. In Kenya we pay interest+principal to our external debts, but pay interest only on our domestic debts...& domestic interest alone comprise more 10% of KRA revenues per year.
A word on Kenyan inflation…look at the latest CBK weekly bulletin, there is a graph showing 12-month overall inflation dipping below 12-month underlying inflation. The rains have lowered food prices considerably, but do we have things backwards, everything else (alcohol, tobacco, fuel, power, transport, housing, clothes, etc…) is much much higher? What happens at the end of February 2010 when KNBS reduces the food inflation weighting to 40.0%, which statistic will be more relevant when core inflation continues to climb above headline inflation?
The last time underlying inflation was at par with overall inflation was in Oct-2005, which coincidentally is when the base index for the new CPI geometric mean...so was Oct-2005 chosen for this reason? Does it represent a time when food inflation was at its lowest?
A citibank analyst observed that food and energy accounted for much of the increase in Kenyan inflation. Food inflation (based on 1997 prices) in Oct-2005 was 2.3% vs 25.2% in Sep-09 while fuel&power inflation declined from 11.0% to -9.5%. But look at the rise in fuel index in geometric terms...I'm not surprised that core (underlying) inflation is up.
“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