External Public Debt and Economic Growth in Kenya
Abstract
This study examines the relationship between external public indebtedness and economic
growth in Kenya. It uses data from 1970 to 2010 from World Development Indicators and
Kenya National Bureau of Statistics. The GDP is the proxy for economic growth. The
explanatory variables are capital, labour, interest payments on external debt, external public
debt, debt service payments, and inflation. Since the data is in time series the augmented
Dickey Fuller Unit Root test is used to ascertain stationarity. The econometric technique of
Ordinary Least Square (OLS) is employed in the data analysis.
The results indicate that external debt and interest payments on external debt payments
contribute negatively to economic growth in Kenya. Capital formation and labour force have
a significant positive contribution to economic growth. The simulation results show that any
percentage increase of external debt holding other factors constant, will reduce the GDP
hence slow economic growth. The study recommends that the policies of debt management in
Kenya be reviewed and improved. The government should pay more attention to the debt
management profile particularly on the expenditure items and diversify the economy to
generate more revenue and avoid external borrowing to the extent possible.
Publisher
University of Nairobi