The government is in dire need of cash, the new measures are meant to help it address the cash shortage that is threatening to cripple the President’s Big Four projects.
Parastatals are required by law to remit surplus funds to the Consolidated Fund every year, instead of keeping the cash in commercial banks. Mr. Yatani further wants them to make full disclosures of internally generated revenues.
Days after President Kenyatta summoned the heads of State corporations and reinforced acting Treasury Cabinet Secretary Ukur Yatani’s orders to remit excess cash in new austerity measures, the treasury has received about half of the sh78 billion target.
However, Global Economist David Ndii is sending a warning over this latest move by the State as it comes with severe consequences. In sex points, Ndii deconstructs the directive and translating what it means.
Below are his pointers;
3. You see, when parastatals bought these t-bonds, they paid GoK. So GoK has already spent this money. Kwisha, that money has been spent!
4. In the absence of a 3rd re discounter (market is illiquid), these t-bonds can only be rediscounted at CBK (the guarantor & lender of last resort of GoK)- meaning CBK (a GoK agent) will pay GoK for these t-bonds! This is akin to printing money – backdoor overdraft to GoK!


Comments
One response to “David Ndii, Wehliye Warns Of Severe Consequences On The State’s Directive To Handover All Their Cash Reserves To The Treasury”
[…] Source link […]