Mbadi: Swift action and luck saved Kenya from sovereign debt default
Business
By
Mary Imenza
| Jan 19, 2026
Treasury CS John Mbadi before the Departmental Committee on Finance and National Planning, at Glee Hotel, Kiambu Road, on January 13, 2026. [Elvis Ogina, Standard]
Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi has defended the government’s management of Kenya’s public debt, saying timely decisions helped the country avoid a potentially devastating sovereign default.
Speaking on Saturday in Kakamega, Mbadi said the government benefited from unexpected market conditions that allowed it to refinance maturing Eurobond obligations at a critical moment when the country was under severe debt pressure.
According to the Treasury boss, Kenya was saved by a rare opening in international financial markets that allowed the government to issue a new Eurobond and refinance an existing one that was nearing maturity.
READ MORE
Agoa renewal offers new chance to redefine Africa's place in global trade
Iran war hits kitchens as shilling slumps, forex reserves dwindle
China woos Kenyan producers with '800-million opportunity' as zero-tariff deal takes effect
Co-op bank shares set for further gains on strong profit growth, lower rates
Kenya slashes dollar debt to record low as Chinese yuan gains ground
Government plans stricter laws to clean up tea sector
Tourism earnings hit record Sh500 billion as arrivals near 8m
Kakamega youth, women eye avocado export cash after skills training
Portable kitchen: Designer taps into space-saving trend
Kenya urged to pilot AI regulatory Sandbox in bid to lead Africa's digital future
“Something no one expected happened. The market opened, and this government went to the market, got another Eurobond and refinanced the other Eurobond,” Mbadi said.
He described the breakthrough as good fortune rather than financial wizardry. “It was luck. It was not any economic magic for Kenya,” he said.
Mbadi, however, emphasized that the government acted decisively to ensure the opportunity did not expose the country to future risks.
He said the Treasury deliberately chose to deal with coming Eurobond repayments earlier than required to reduce pressure on public finances.
“That is why last February and March, because we were aware another Eurobond was coming up for payment in May 2027, we decided to deal with it early,” he said.
He added that the Treasury made a similar move later in the year.
“In September again, we dealt with 2028. We didn’t want to behave like the other government which decided to leave the rest.”
Mbadi revealed that Kenya had been flagged by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) as being at high risk of sovereign default, alongside several other African countries.
“IMF categorised Kenya among five other countries in Africa which were going into default. All those countries have defaulted. It is only Kenya which has not defaulted,” he said.
He said a default would have had devastating consequences for the economy and public servants, including massive salary cuts and job losses.
According to Mbadi, any bailout from international lenders such as the IMF and World Bank would have come with harsh conditions.
“For us to be bailed out by IMF and World Bank, they will come and tell us: you have found yourself in a mess, and we have to clean you. To clean you, you start with yourself. Everybody, 50 per cent pay cut. Some staff must go home,”he said.
He said Kenya narrowly avoided that scenario.
MOST READ
- Iran war hits kitchens as shilling slumps, forex reserves dwindle
BUSINESS
By Brian Ngugi
- China woos Kenyan producers with '800-million opportunity' as zero-tariff deal takes effect
BUSINESS
By Brian Ngugi
- Co-op bank shares set for further gains on strong profit growth, lower rates
BUSINESS
By Brian Ngugi