• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World
  • Lifestyle
Kenya clashes, Bolivia’s failed coup show perils of economic hardship

Kenya clashes, Bolivia’s failed coup show perils of economic hardship

28/06/2024
Rebuilding Aba a difficult but necessary task – Otti

Otti launches Security Trust Fund to boost fight against crime

10/07/2025
Court strikes out Sanwo-Olu’s suit against EFCC

Sanwo-Olu reaffirms Lagos as innovation hub

10/07/2025
Edo Guber: Wike's cousin will not be removed as INEC REC - INEC

INEC receives 7 new applications for party registration ahead of 2027 elections

10/07/2025
Breaking! Tinubu sacks Mele Kyari, NNPCL board members, appoints replacement

Senate fumes as NNPCL boss Ojulari shuns public accounts hearing again

10/07/2025
FRSC begins 2024 ember months campaign nationwide

FRSC intercepts stolen car in Jigawa

10/07/2025
Over 250,000 voters submit recall petition against Senator Natasha

Senate replaces Natasha as diaspora committee chair

10/07/2025
Senate will assess petrol price hike and intervene if need be — Akpabio

NCSCN seeks Akpabio’s support for speedy passage of Peace Corps Bill

10/07/2025
I was most demonised person under Jonathan administration – Shettima

I was most demonised person under Jonathan administration – Shettima

10/07/2025
Rotary donates kits, nets to expectant mothers in Nasarawa

Rotary donates kits, nets to expectant mothers in Nasarawa

10/07/2025
“Shadow Govt”: Court fixes DSS’s suit against Pat Utomi for judgement 

“Shadow Govt”: Court fixes DSS’s suit against Pat Utomi for judgement 

10/07/2025
“Hard decisions for development” – Tinubu speaks on petrol price hike

Tinubu urges Okpebholo to leverage Supreme Court victory for accelerated devt

10/07/2025
PDP cautioned against supporting anti-government protest

No PDP exco-member has joined ADC in Yobe – Group

10/07/2025
  • Home
  • News
    • Security
    • Foreign
  • Business
    • Technology
    • NIMASA & Maritime
  • Entertainment
    • Relationship
    • Style
  • Politics
  • Features
  • Sports
  • Column
    • Opinion
    • Column – Monday
    • Column – Thursday
    • Column – Wednesday
    • column – Friday
Friday, July 11, 2025
  • Login
  • Register
SundiataPost
  • Home
  • News
    • Security
    • Foreign
  • Business
    • Technology
    • NIMASA & Maritime
  • Entertainment
    • Relationship
    • Style
  • Politics
  • Features
  • Sports
  • Column
    • Opinion
    • Column – Monday
    • Column – Thursday
    • Column – Wednesday
    • column – Friday
No Result
View All Result
SundiataPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Features

Kenya clashes, Bolivia’s failed coup show perils of economic hardship

by Emmanuel Chisom
28/06/2024
in Features
250 7
0
Kenya clashes, Bolivia’s failed coup show perils of economic hardship
500
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Deadly Kenyan protests that scuppered tax hikes and a failed coup amid fading economic prospects in Bolivia this week are violent reminders of the dangers posed by faltering economies and punishing austerity measures.

Bolivia’s President and former economy minister Luis Arce fended off the putsch on Wednesday, but faces ongoing U.S. dollar shortages and soaring borrowing costs that pushed the country’s credit rating to “junk.”

Kenya’s President William Ruto, who reversed support for a tax-hike measure, now must find another path to make his nation’s debt pile of some 80 billion dollars more manageable.

Around the world, low-income nations were sucked into economic crisis – and in some cases, debt default – after the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic decimated parts of the global economy.

Now, the crisis is reverberating in Kenya, Bolivia, and other middle-income nations bearing the brunt of a surge in inflation and the rapid global interest rate rises that followed the pandemic.

Borrowing costs soared and Russia’s war in Ukraine exacerbated a rise in prices of fuel and food.

“There are a lot of governments around the world all facing the pain, delayed fiscal pain, from the interest rate hikes that we’ve seen in recent years” said Charlie Robertson, head of macro strategy with FIM Partners, which invests in emerging market debt.

“It’s not a surprise that the country (Kenya) might reach a breaking point.”

At least 23 people died in Kenya as protests spiralled from online condemnations of the tax hikes into mass rallies demanding a political overhaul.

“It is not just the taxes,” said Mary Ngigi, a 37-year-old clothing company worker in Kenya, on why she was protesting.

“When you go to the hospitals, there is no medicine. When you go to the schools, there are no infrastructures.”

Turmoil is spreading. In Nigeria, workers protesting rising fuel and food costs caused a nationwide power outage, and leaders faced rising subsidy costs despite tripling petrol prices last year.

Angola is also trying to cut subsidies, while Egypt is under pressure from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a slew of spending cuts and reforms that could cause more pain for citizens reeling from record-high inflation above 30 per cent.

Risk intelligence firm Verisk Maplecroft warned that more subsidy cuts or tax hikes could serve as a trigger for unrest.

Argentina was roiled by huge general strikes in May against painful austerity measures and planned reforms by libertarian President Javier Milei, whose cost-cutting drive cheered investors but hammered the real economy.

Rising borrowing costs mean debt service gobbles a growing chunk of revenues. This puts pressure on countries, including Kenya to raise taxes and cut spending.

In 2023, a record 54 developing countries, equivalent to 38 per cent of the total, allocated 10 per cent or more of government revenues to interest payments, with nearly half of them in Africa, according to a report from UN Trade and Development agency, UNCTAD.

Multilateral banks and political risk firms have warned of a ticking time bomb for some time.

While debt relief efforts had centred on the poorest nations with solvency problems, and rightly so according to the World Bank, not enough had been done for lower-middle-income countries facing temporary liquidity pressures soon.

“Without action, 2024 will see a further rise in debt vulnerability – potentially leading to reversals in development outcomes,” World Bank senior managing director Axel van Trotsenburg warned.

Kenya, like others, borrowed heavily in the mid-2000s, when interest rates were low – and China was splashing cash via its Belt and Road initiative to lend to emerging markets worldwide.

Over the past 20 years Kenya amassed some 82 billion dollars of debt to build roads, railways, and factories.

But not all ambitious projects were completed and many Kenyans felt they had not benefited, while a slew of corruption scandals spurred allegations that elites enriched themselves.

“There is no cut on corruption,” Boniface Mwangi, a prominent social justice activist in Kenya told Reuters.

“We have no problem paying debt, but…what did you do with that money that you borrowed?”

Ruto has said he is waging a war on corruption and has called for those responsible for graft to be prosecuted.

Kenya managed to avoid default by issuing more debt earlier this year – but at a punishing interest rate above 10 per cent.

After this week’s protest, the country’s bond prices slid again.

To keep crucial IMF cash coming, Ruto must find a way to balance the books.

“Kenya’s government has a budget, and cash is not endless – so they need to prioritise,” said Lutz Roehmeyer at Capitulum Asset Management.

The IMF, which warned Kenya to reverse “fiscal slippage”, did not comment on whether it was asking for too much, but said in a statement that it was “closely monitoring the situation.”

For Ruto — and other leaders struggling to tame debt — the path forward is far less clear after this week.

“The question is whether this is the canary singing the warning to the government, and the IMF, as to how much fiscal austerity can be packed into one year,” Robertson said. (NANFeatures)

Share this:

  • Tweet
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
Tags: African NewsKenyaWilliam Ruto
Share200Tweet125
Emmanuel Chisom

Emmanuel Chisom

https://sundiatapost.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/cbn-gocashless.mp4

For more news updates and commentaries click below to join us on WhatsApp

PAY ATTENTION: Follow Sundiata Post on WhatsApp so you don’t miss breaking news and commentaries. Click HERE TO JOIN US NOW!!!

SundiataPost

Copyright ©2024 SundiataPost. Website - 08067783809

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertisement
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us
  • The Team

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Security
    • Foreign
  • Business
    • Technology
    • NIMASA & Maritime
  • Entertainment
    • Relationship
    • Style
  • Politics
  • Features
  • Sports
  • Column
    • Opinion
    • Column – Monday
    • Column – Thursday
    • Column – Wednesday
    • column – Friday

Copyright ©2024 SundiataPost. Website - 08067783809