The World Bank has imposed three binding conditions on Kenya before it can disburse a loan facility worth KES 96.9 billion (approximately USD 750 million). The funding, which is critical to bolstering the states fiscal position, has been blocked pending the fulfilment of specific legal and policy benchmarks set by the multilateral lender. The conditions, as outlined in the article, span the domains of social welfare, financial market innovation, and environmental governance.
Kenya’s Threefold Fiscal Condition
The first hurdle requires the Kenyan government to pass regulations that clearly define the criteria for monthly cash stipends paid under the country’s social protection programmes. These programmes target vulnerable groups, including orphans, the elderly, and persons with disabilities, and the World Bank is seeking formal legal rules to govern beneficiary selection and payment structures. The second condition relates to the capital markets; Kenya must issue regulations establishing a framework for Sustainability-Linked Bonds (SLBs). These instruments are designed to raise funds tied to the achievement of specific environmental and social outcomes, and the absence of a governing legal framework has stalled their introduction.
The third and final prerequisite concerns Kenya’s environmental agenda. The World Bank is demanding legal backing for the national policy that aims to increase the country’s tree cover to at least 30 percent by the year 2032. Without formal legislation supporting this forest conservation target, the lender has refused to release the funds. The article underscores that the government faces a tight deadline, as failure to meet all three conditions by June 30 would result in Kenya losing access to the loan for the second consecutive financial year, potentially worsening the country’s liquidity challenges.