PHOTO | BILY MUTAI IMF managing director Ms Christine Lagarde (left)   speaking when she met National Treasury Cabinet Secretary Henry Rotich  at the Treasury Building in Nairobi on January 6, 2014. She praised  Kenya for bold economic reforms in the past few years.                              DAILY NATION
Successful completion of the devolution process, investment in  infrastructure and regional integration are the three factors that will  boost Kenya’s quest for economic transformation.
This  was the message from the International Monetary Fund managing director  Christine Lagarde as she began her maiden three-day visit to the country  on Monday.
Meeting members of the Kenyan business  community in Nairobi, Ms Lagarde said the country has made remarkable  economic gains over the past few years on the back of bold reforms that  have laid the foundations to lift the economy to middle-income status  within the next decade.  
BUILD ON MOMENTUM
"Kenya  has indeed come a long way over the past few years. The key is now to  build on this momentum, with emphasis in the following areas. We might  call them the ‘Three C’s’: completing fiscal devolution; closing  infrastructure gaps; and continuing regional integration,” Ms Lagarde.
During  her visit, she will be hosted by President Kenyatta and other top  government officials to meetings at which new partnerships between the  IMF and Kenya will be assessed.
In his brief to the  President, National Treasury Cabinet Secretary Henry Rotich said the  government will be seeking access to bigger credit facilities to help  cushion the country against unexpected external and internal shocks that  it remains vulnerable to. 
“Considering that we have  almost exhausted our Poverty Reduction and Growth Trust (PGRT) window,  we need to make a strong case to the IMF MD for a bland precautionary  facility that involves both PGRT and the General Resources Account which  is non-concessional,” Mr Rotich said.
The new facility, Mr Rotich said, would serve as an insurance policy in the event of unexpected shocks.
“This  should be a facility of last resort and should only be used when it is  clear that policy actions alone are not sufficient to effectively  respond to the ensuing shocks,” the statement reads. 
GOVT PRAISED
In  her speech, Ms Lagarde lauded the government for adopting policies that  have helped anchor the conditions for a strong and stable growth but  also acknowledged the  external shocks the country is likely to suffer  as it opens its financial markets to the globe. 
“Kenya  has built a strong external position and is now in a favourable  condition to tap international financial markets with the planned  Eurobond issue. Going forward, as Kenya becomes more integrated in the  global economy, it is bound to be exposed to external shocks through  spillovers from trading partners’ economies or volatility in  international financial markets,” she said.
“Further  bolstering its foreign reserve position and lowering its debt burden  will ensure that the country is resilient to these shocks.” 
But  the economic gains the country has made in the past, Ms Lagarde said,  will only be sustainable if the government maintains its reform agenda,  invests more in infrastructure and complete the fiscal devolution  process.
AVOIDING DUPLICATION
“It  is imperative that devolution is done right. That means spending needs  to remain within the available envelope of public resources — and be  transparent. It also means avoiding duplication of functions between the  central and local government,” Lagarde said.
“Proper  management of public resources is very important. Transparency,  accountability and publication of information cannot be over-emphasized,  especially with minerals such as oil and gas.”  
While  encouraging foreign investment in the country’s infrastructure  development, the IMF chief cautioned that the financing agreements must  remain consistent with a sustainable debt position.
She  called for a deeper  integration of the East African Community in order  for the countries to continue enjoying the opening up of new markets,  emergence of a middle class and enhanced domestic demand which have  become an engine for growth. 
“In that context, the  heads of state of the EAC recently agreed on a roadmap toward a monetary  union. This is an opportunity but also a major challenge. It will be  important to draw upon the experience and lessons learned from other  regions and to manage the process carefully,” she said. 
Kenya  Private Sector Alliance chairman Vimal Shah called on international  investors to take advantage of the economic gains the country has made  in the past few years, emerging from a poverty-stricken country to being  a key business hub in the continent.
“Kenya is investible, it is an open economy and a fertile ground for investors,” Mr Shah said.
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