An investigation of the effects of Kenya’s external debt on exchange rate fluctuations
Abstract
The exchange rates in Kenya have been rising over the years and so has been the external
debt. This trend was the subject of this study why an investigation was performed on
whether exchange rates are influenced by external debt stocks. Empirical studies have
shown contradicting results with the direction of the relationship also being a subject of
some studies. Lack of studies on the same in Kenya provided a motivation for the current
study. The objective of this study was therefore to assess empirically the effect of
Kenya’s external debt on exchange rate fluctuations.
A correlation design was selected for the study. The population and subsequent sample
size was 360 data points covering a period of 40 years from 1971 – 2010 with 9 variables
under study. The dependent variable was exchange rate while the independent variable
was external debt. Control variables used were GDP, interest rate, inflation rate, terms of
trade, net foreign assets and government expenditure. Secondary data was collected from
the World Bank website, the CBK website and from the Kenya National Bureau of
Statistics. SPSS was used to analyse data using descriptive statistics, correlation and
regression analysis.
The study found that there was a general upward trend in both external debt and
exchange rate fluctuations. The model accounted for 95.3% of the variance exchange
rates. The F statistic (79.082) was significant at 5% level. Further, the study revealed that
external debt, interest rate, and net foreign assets had a positive and significant effect on
exchange rate. On the other hand, inflation and FDI inflows had negative and significant
v
effects on exchange rates. External debt accounted for 63% of the foreign exchange
volatility. The study therefore concludes that Kenya’s external debt positively and
significantly affects her exchange rate fluctuations and this is consistent with theory and
research on the same. The study recommends that decisions on controlling exchange rates must take into account factors which are beyond the control the Central Bank of Kenya such as external debt, net foreign assets, and FDI inflows. The Central Bank of Kenya and the Treasury must therefore work together to tame exchange rate volatility. There is need to replicate this study to a large sample size especially in Africa and to test more factors in the model other than the ones tested in this study.
Publisher
University of Nairobi School Of Business, University Of Nairobi