Well that is your theory - but the story says -"Foreign currency deposits in local banks have risen past the half a trillion mark for the first time, mainly driven by Kenyans sending money home to take advantage of the tax amnesty programme."
With regard to gov public investment and 26-30B budget - I think as we wait for 2nd Q figures - the first Q1 figures were really good - agricluture - which is still the elephant in the house (25% of gdp - and probably twice as industry) - is generally kicking butt this year - and none of the sector was down !!!
I think economy is doing fine - it's just hiccups otherwise its very likely the economy will grow by 6.5% and here we are crying.
I know that's what the writer wrote but its wrong. Lets take increase in remittance; Is it that the number of kenyans in diaspora has increased to justify increase in remittance? Or is it that diaspora is earning more to justify increase? Better yet is that kenyans in diaspora are investing more in kenya due to increase in economic confidence of kenya? Has kenyan exports increased? The answer to all those questions is No. Mind you we're talking about bank deposits in forex not forex reserves in CBK. Tax amnesty; if its what has led to increased deposits it means money being repatriated is kept in forex fortify my argument that they're hedging against the shilling. Otherwise they'd be converting into shillings.
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The argument is about increased bank forex deposits to the tune of $600m. Remittance normally is sent in forex then converted to shilling its not kept in forex. Normally remittance would be captured by CBK forex reserve cause literally CBK buys the forex in shillings. i.e they keep the forex and sells shillings. This means Kenyans are opening USD accounts to hedge against the shilling.
Treasury is scrambling to fund $26b budget that's why they had to VAT fuel. And since economic growth has been driven by goverment spending halting of new projects will surely mean slower growth. Government can't borrow more or raise more taxes. So the liberal policy of tax and spend is over.
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