July 5, 2024

Ruto targets Sh323.5 billion more in taxes in Sh4.55 trillion budget

3 min read
Ruto targets Sh323.5 billion more in taxes in Sh4.55 trillion budget

Treasury plans to collect an additional Sh323.5 billion in taxes for the 2024/25 fiscal year to fund Sh4.55 trillion Ruto budget

Treasury plans to collect an additional Sh323.5 billion in taxes for the 2024/25 fiscal year to fund Sh4.55 trillion Ruto budget

In a budget expenditure plan that will see the William Ruto-led administration spend a total of Sh4.55 trillion, largely on wages and debt repayments, the government aims to collect an additional Sh323.5 billion in taxes.

According to the 2024 Budget Policy Statement (BPS), the government intends to levy far-reaching taxes on hard-to-tax industries like agriculture, digital, and informal sectors in order to achieve its goal of collecting Sh2.95 trillion in taxes for the fiscal year 2024–2025 (July–June).

In the current fiscal year ending June this year, the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) has been tasked with collecting Sh2.62 trillion from both direct and indirect taxes. 

Already, the KRA has missed its target for the first six months by Sh186.2 billion, with income taxes paid by corporations and employees contributing the most to this shortfall, a Treasury document shows.

The taxman collected Sh1.09 trillion between July and December last year as the Kenya Kwanza administration continues to implement its first budget which has been characterised by high taxes aimed at reducing the budget hole through a process known as fiscal consolidation.

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“The consolidation will be supported by enhanced revenue mobilisation and rationalisation of non-priority expenditure while protecting essential social and development budget,” said the Cabinet Secretary for National Treasury and Economic Planning Professor Njuguna Ndung’u.

To support its fiscal consolidation, the government entered into a conditional financing arrangement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in what was aimed at averting a fiscal crisis as the country inches closer to the June deadline for the repayment of the $2 billion (Sh291 billion) of the Eurobond.

Last week, the Treasury raised $1.5 billion through a Eurobond issuance with the proceeds of the bond expected to be used to buy back part of the 2024 sovereign bond.

In the upcoming fiscal year, the National Treasury plans to borrow Sh753.2 billion with a big chunk of the financing, Sh377.7 billion, coming from the domestic investors.

The government will borrow Sh326.1 billion from foreign creditors, mostly multilateral institutions such as the World Bank and the IMF.

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