Kenya's finance ministry will seek suggestions from the public on new legislation to boost revenue and tackle other challenges, Finance Minister John Mbadi said on Monday, after protesters forced the government to withdraw its financing law.
President William Ruto discarded tax hikes worth more than 346 billion shillings ($2.7 bln) in June after protests that killed more than 50 people.
The move left the heavily indebted government with a bigger budget deficit for this financial year, mounting pending bills, and a delay in funding from the International Monetary Fund.
"We are barely managing. This is not where we wanted to be, but we are here," Mbadi told a budget preparation meeting. He was appointed from the opposition last month as Ruto sought to stabilise his government.
The minister initially said he would revive some tax hikes in the abandoned finance bill, before rowing back after a public outcry and threat of more protests.
"I will be issuing a circular tomorrow, inviting the public's participation to submit proposals on some legislative reforms to improve our current economic situation," he said.
Kenyans will have until Sept. 20 to submit views.
Mbadi said the country had no choice but to keep servicing its debt, which stands at above the optimum level recommended by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, after years of borrowing driven by infrastructure construction.
"We have no two ways about it. There is no debt restructuring in this country. We will not accept it. We will not do it. We will manage our debts and pay and remain afloat," he said.
Once the situation improves, the government will consider tax cuts in the medium term, Mbadi said, including reducing the value added tax on goods and services to 14% from 16%, and slashing the corporate income tax by 500 basis points to 25%.
Latest Stories
-
PURC educates Adaklu Hlihave residents on consumer rights, vows to address billing concerns
1 min -
I didn’t know King Paluta’s ‘Makoma’ was going to be too big – Amerado
2 mins -
Prof Seth Lartey calls for urgent legislation on tissue and organ donation to combat corneal blindness in Ghana
5 mins -
ECOWAS Commission empowers Ghanaian journalists with safety strategies to combat disinformation during elections
12 mins -
ECOWAS Commission partners with Ghanaian journalists to combat gendered disinformation, promoting participatory democracy
20 mins -
Bawumia means business; vote for him – Ahiagbah advocates
29 mins -
We appreciate your valuable contribution to sports – NSA congratulates Muftawu Nabila Abdulai on GJA Sports Journalist of the Year Award
2 hours -
Big Chef Tertiary Season 2: Keche pays surprise visit to contestants
2 hours -
Speak against EC’s actions that can undermine our peace – Opoku-Agyemang to traditional leaders
3 hours -
Opoku-Agyemang: NDC committed to reviving neglected cocoa roads
3 hours -
Mohammed Salisu scores maiden Champions League goal against Dinamo Zagreb
4 hours -
Mahama urges NDC to avoid complacency despite favorable Fitch, Global InfoAnalytics poll results
4 hours -
CJ responds to AG: Delays in galamsey cases stem from prosecutors actions, not judges
4 hours -
Address shifts in food supply, agric labour as a result of climate change effects – GSS to Gov’t
4 hours -
Mahama Ayariga files RTI to Communications Minister; demands certain information on Next-Gen InfraCo deal
4 hours