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Domestic Borrowing Costs Rise as Inflation Heats Up in Kenya

Ruth Atieno by Ruth Atieno
May 8, 2026
in News
Reading Time: 2 mins read

Kenya’s rising domestic debt-servicing costs are occurring alongside renewed inflationary pressure and higher returns on short-term government securities, signalling tighter financing conditions within the local market.

Inflation rose by to 5.6% in April from 4.4% in March. The increase pushed inflation closer to the upper range of the Central Bank of Kenya’s preferred band of 2.5%-7.7% and has implications for both monetary policy expectations and government borrowing costs. At the same time, yields on short-term government papers have continued trending upwards as the Treasury increases domestic borrowing to finance the budget deficit. Higher yields on Treasury bills indicate that investors are demanding stronger returns to compensate for inflation risk and prevailing liquidity conditions.

The relationship between inflation and domestic borrowing is significant because rising consumer prices directly affect investor behaviour in the bond market. When inflation accelerates, fixed-income investors seek higher nominal returns to maintain positive real yields. This forces governments to offer more attractive rates on debt instruments, particularly short-term securities that reprice faster in response to market conditions.

Treasury projections already show domestic debt-service costs increasing sharply over the medium term. Interest payments on domestic debt are expected to rise from Kshs 883.7 bn in the current fiscal year to Kshs 986.7 bn by FY2026/27. Estimates further suggest domestic interest payments could approach kshs 1tn in subsequent fiscal cycles if borrowing levels remain elevated.

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The increase in short-term yields also reflects changing investor preferences. In periods of inflation uncertainty, investors often favour shorter-duration securities because they reduce exposure to interest-rate volatility. This can increase reliance on Treasury bills relative to longer-term bonds, raising refinancing pressure on the government since short-term instruments mature more frequently and require continuous rollover.

For the banking sector, elevated Treasury yields may strengthen incentives to allocate liquidity toward government securities instead of private-sector lending. Government papers are generally considered lower-risk assets and become increasingly attractive when yields rise. Economists commonly associate this trend with reduced credit availability for businesses, particularly smaller firms that rely heavily on bank financing.

The interaction between inflation, domestic borrowing and rising yields therefore matters beyond debt-servicing figures alone. It influences monetary conditions, liquidity distribution and overall credit pricing within the economy. Future borrowing costs will likely depend on the pace of inflation, fiscal consolidation measures and investor demand for government securities in the domestic market.  (Start your investment journey today with the cytonn MMF, call+2540709101200 or email sales@cytonn.com)

 

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