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IMF Staff Mission Set to Resume Talks in Kenya on New Financial Arrangement

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NAIROBI Kenya is preparing for a significant visit from a team of International Monetary Fund officials this week as both sides resume negotiations over a possible new financial support programme. The mission, scheduled to run from February 24 to March 4 2026, marks a continuation of discussions between Kenyan authorities and the Washington‑based lender aimed at securing a successor agreement following the lapse of the previous IMF arrangement.

The Kenyan government confirmed that the visiting IMF team will hold in‑depth talks with officials in Nairobi on policy reforms and potential financial assistance. According to a public Eurobond prospectus, the talks are intended to ensure that any new programme aligns with Kenya’s fiscal and economic priorities while bolstering macroeconomic stability.

Kenya’s earlier Extended Fund Facility and Extended Credit Facility worth $3.6 billion expired in April 2025, and negotiations on the final review of that programme stalled as Nairobi struggled to meet key performance targets. The collapse of the previous arrangement meant the country forfeited roughly $850 million in expected funding. In response, Kenya formally requested a fresh IMF programme to support medium‑term financing and reform measures.

Finance Minister John Mbadi has reiterated Kenya’s interest in a new IMF programme, noting that although IMF financing has not been budgeted for the current or upcoming fiscal year, securing an agreement would strengthen investor confidence in the country’s economic management.

Among the issues on the agenda are fiscal reforms, debt sustainability and the treatment of securitised revenue streams that the government has used to fund large development projects. Differences over how such obligations should be classified have previously complicated talks with the IMF and remain a focus of ongoing negotiations.

The outcome of the mission will be closely watched by financial markets and policymakers, as Kenya navigates elevated debt servicing costs and broader economic pressures. Authorities are also pursuing alternative financing measures, including international bond issuance, to ease budgetary strains while reform discussions continue.

If successful, a new IMF arrangement could provide Kenya with much‑needed financial backing and a framework for fiscal discipline, though both sides will need to reconcile policy priorities and conditionalities before any formal programme is agreed.

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