Skip to main content

Steep rise in Rwanda’s public debt worries MPs


Steep rise in Rwanda's public debt worries MPs

SHARE BOOKMARKPRINTRATING
By EMMANUEL RUTAYISIRE Special Correspondent

Posted  Saturday, March 9  2013 at  20:18
IN SUMMARY
  • The loans are meant to finance small and medium enterprises in the agricultural sector and electricity rollout in rural Rwanda.
  • Rwanda's SME segment has been exhibiting a high appetite for investment capital over the past couple of years even as most local financial institutions continue to shun it, considering it a high-risk area.
Rwanda's recent aggressive borrowing saw lawmakers raising concerns last week over the surge in the country's cost of debt hurting the economy, which is also facing pressures from global economic uncertainties and aid suspensions.
Minister of Finance and Economic Planning Claver Gatete faced tough questions from parliamentarians last week as he sought their approval for government to borrow $17 million.
The loans are meant to finance small and medium enterprises in the agricultural sector and electricity rollout in rural Rwanda.
Parliament ultimately endorsed the government decision to borrow $5 million from Arab Bank for Economic Development in Africa for Rwanda Development Bank to lend to farmers while the rest, $12 million, from Opec, is aimed at accelerating the rural electrification programme as well as boosting the capacity of power distributor EWASA.
Analysts view these as strategic decisions, particularly borrowing to finance SMEs, which account for 90 per cent of the businesses in Rwanda and 84 per cent of private sector employment.
Rwanda's SME segment has been exhibiting a high appetite for investment capital over the past couple of years even as most local financial institutions continue to shun it, considering it a high-risk area.
That's why such borrowing, aimed at improving medium and long-term financing for SMEs, is seen as a crucial long-term investment to support growth, job creation and economic output.
While the rural electrification programme is viewed as a social good, parliamentarians were concerned the country could sink into debt given the recent aggressive borrowing to fund other development needs.
Mr Gatete, who until two weeks ago was governor of the National Bank of Rwanda (BNR), requested parliamentarians to expedite the ratification of the two loan agreements, demonstrating the government's urgent need for money to fix the funding shortfall after some donors suspended or withheld aid to Rwanda.
"What is the national debt level? Do we still have the means to service these debts?" MP Jean Damscene Murara asked.
Mr Gatete has sought to allay MPs' fears, noting that with debt ratio of 22.9 per cent of GDP, excluding grants, the national debt is still below the ceiling government has agreed upon with the International Monetary Fund.
Rwanda's nominal GDP stood at Rwf4,437 billion ($6.7 billion) at the end of last year, meaning the country's debt levels stood at Rwf1,016.14 billion ($1.6 billion). The IMF says that roughly, a ratio of debt to GDP below 30 per cent is considered reasonable.
However, it is the pace at which the government is borrowing is what is worrying MPs and some economists.
Last week, Rwanda also secured $60 million from the World Bank and plans to borrow an extra $350 million through the issuance of a sovereign bond, to pay off loans that were acquired to finance the national airline as well as support the completion of the conference centre.
To bridge its funding shortfall, the government will increase its borrowing from the domestic debt market from Rwf8 billion ($12.6 million) that was earlier planned to Rwf20 billion ($31.6 million).

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Le Troisième Mandat de Louise Mushikiwabo à l'OIF : Entre Précédent et Principe Démocratique.

Le Troisième Mandat de Louise Mushikiwabo à l'OIF : Entre Précédent et Principe Démocratique. L'Alternance à l'OIF : Pourquoi un Troisième Mandat Fragilise la Crédibilité de la Francophonie. Introduction Louise Mushikiwabo veut un troisième mandat à la tête de l'Organisation internationale de la Francophonie. Son annonce, faite bien avant l'émergence d'autres candidats, rappelle une tactique familière en Afrique : affirmer qu'on a le soutien populaire sans jamais le prouver publiquement. La méthode est rodée. Des dirigeants africains l'utilisent depuis des décennies pour prolonger leur règne. Ils clament que "le peuple le demande" ou que "les partenaires soutiennent" cette reconduction. Aucune preuve formelle n'est nécessaire. L'affirmation devient réalité politique. Mais voilà le problème : la Francophonie prêche la démocratie, l'État de droit et l'alternance au pouvoir. Peut-elle tolérer en son sein ce qu...

Pourquoi les sanctions américaines contre le Rwanda sont-elles si importantes ?

Pourquoi les sanctions amĂ©ricaines contre le Rwanda sont-elles si importantes ? Auteur : The African Rights Campaign. Londres, Royaume-Uni PubliĂ© en : mars 2026   Introduction Lorsqu'un gouvernement est accusĂ© d'exĂ©cutions extrajudiciaires, de dĂ©placements massifs, de violences sexuelles, de violations des droits de l'homme et du pillage systĂ©matique des ressources naturelles d'un pays voisin, la rĂ©ponse diplomatique attendue est un dĂ©menti catĂ©gorique, Ă©tayĂ© par des preuves. Le Rwanda ne l'a pas fait. Lorsque le dĂ©partement amĂ©ricain du TrĂ©sor a imposĂ© des sanctions aux Forces de dĂ©fense rwandaises (FDR) et Ă  quatre de leurs commandants les plus haut placĂ©s, le 2 mars 2026, la porte-parole officielle de Kigali, Yolande Makolo, a dĂ©livrĂ© une dĂ©claration que les analystes diplomatiques Ă©tudieront attentivement pour ce qu'elle omet conspicuement. Elle a dit que les sanctions Ă©taient « injustes », qu'elles ciblaient « uniquement...

Rubaya Mine Under USA’s Control: Kagame Has No Grounds to Object.

Rubaya Mine: Strategic Interests, Regional Conflict and the DRC–USA Cooperation Framework Rubaya mine, located in Masisi territory in North Kivu, eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, is a Congolese resource. It was a Congolese resource before the M23 advanced on it, it remains a Congolese resource today, and it will remain a Congolese resource regardless of what any regional actor claims, implies or pursues. That is not a political position. It is a statement of international law and sovereign right. This foundational point must be stated plainly because it is frequently obscured in discussions about the conflict in eastern Congo. Debates about security narratives, mineral partnerships and geopolitical alignment risk creating a false impression that Rubaya's ownership or governance is somehow open to negotiation between external parties. It is not. The Democratic Republic of the Congo holds sovereign authority over its territory and its natural resources. N...

BBC News

Africanews

UNDP - Africa Job Vacancies

How We Made It In Africa – Insight into business in Africa

Migration Policy Institute