No Result
View All Result
  • Login
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
theadvisertimes.com
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
No Result
View All Result
theadvisertimes.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Economy

A Schumpeterian Analysis of the Eurobond Scandal through Rothbard’s Cui Bono

by theadvisertimes.com
1 month ago
in Economy
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0
A Schumpeterian Analysis of the Eurobond Scandal through Rothbard’s Cui Bono
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LInkedIn


Joseph Schumpeter, in Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy (1942), offered a starkly realistic definition of democracy: it is not the rule of the people by the people, but “that institutional arrangement for arriving at political decisions in which individuals acquire the power to decide by means of a competitive struggle for the people’s vote.” In this view, democracy functions as an elite contest, politicians and their coalitions vie for office, much like firms compete in a market. Once victorious, they wield state power not primarily for the public good but to reward supporters, secure reelection, and extract rents. Kenya’s post-1992 multiparty system embodies this Schumpeterian reality: competitive elections occur, yet governance remains “politicians’ rule,” where the apparatus of the state serves the victors’ networks rather than the electorate.

Nowhere is this clearer than in the 2014 Eurobond scandal, the country’s debut sovereign bond issuance. Profiling the episode through Murray Rothbard’s famous question cui bono? (“who benefits?”) reveals an empirical pattern of elite capture. Billions flowed offshore, audits flagged massive discrepancies, investigations were blocked, and no one was held accountable, while ordinary Kenyans inherited a heavier debt burden with scant traceable development. The scandal synthesizes why Kenya operates under politicians’ rule, not popular sovereignty, and hints at what “Kenya without politicians’ rule” might require: institutional constraints that limit the competitive victors’ access to unchecked borrowing and spending.

The Empirical Facts of the Eurobond Scandal

In June 2014, less than 18 months after Uhuru Kenyatta’s election victory in March 2013, the Jubilee administration (Kenyatta as President, William Ruto as Deputy) issued Kenya’s first Eurobond. The initial tranche raised $2 billion (approximately Ksh 176 billion at prevailing rates), followed by a second raising $815 million, for a combined $2.75–2.8 billion (roughly Ksh 250 billion). The stated purposes were budget support, infrastructure development, and reducing domestic borrowing to lower interest rates and crowd in private investment.

The funds were deposited in an offshore account at JP Morgan Chase in New York. Two primary transactions followed: approximately $604 million (Ksh 53 billion) repaid a pending syndicated loan, and $394 million (Ksh 35 billion) was transferred to the Kenyan exchequer. This left roughly $1.002 billion (about Ksh 88–100 billion, depending on exchange rates) unaccounted for in the offshore vehicle.

Subsequent government explanations collapsed under scrutiny. Officials claimed up to Ksh 120 billion had funded pending road contractor bills and budget support. Yet the 2014/15 recurrent budget figures contradict this: domestic revenues covered nearly the entire national government allocation (Ksh 897 billion required versus Ksh 877 billion available after county transfers), rendering massive Eurobond supplementation implausible. Ministries later admitted they could not trace whether disbursements originated from taxes, domestic borrowing, or the Eurobond—effectively rendering the funds fungible and untraceable.

Auditor-General Edward Ouko’s office repeatedly flagged the anomalies. In special audits and annual reports, he noted that Ksh 215.47 billion in net proceeds could not be satisfactorily accounted for or traced to specific projects within the domestic economy. The Public Finance Management Act (2012) requires all such receipts to enter the Consolidated Fund with parliamentary oversight; this was not done for the bulk of the offshore balance. Ouko’s attempted forensic audit, coordinating with JP Morgan, the New York Federal Reserve, and other banks, was reportedly blocked by President Kenyatta, who framed it as implying improper collusion. By 2019 (and with echoes in later audits), the accuracy of expenditures remained unascertained. IMF reports highlighted inconsistencies in domestic borrowing figures (initially reported at Ksh 110 billion, later revised to Ksh 251 billion), further muddying the trail.

The scandal also intertwined with the earlier Anglo-Leasing ghost contracts. To burnish Kenya’s creditworthiness ahead of the Eurobond launch, the government paid Ksh 1.4 billion to two Anglo-Leasing-linked shell companies (First Mercantile Securities and Universal Satspace) following a Geneva arbitration loss, despite a 2006 Kenyan audit and 2012 High Court ruling exposing the contracts as fraudulent and non-existent. Additional payments, including $16.4 million to businessman Deepak Kamani (purportedly to “facilitate” the bond) and demands for Ksh 3.05 billion more from Anura Perera, surfaced. Selective prosecutions in 2015 targeted some Anglo-Leasing figures but produced no convictions and conveniently spared Kenyatta-linked actors.

Later Eurobond issuances (2018, 2019, and even 2025 under the Ruto administration) followed similar patterns of opacity, with fresh audit concerns over diverted proceeds (Ksh 110 billion questioned in 2025). Yet the 2014 episode remains the archetype: billions borrowed in the people’s name, vanishing into untraceable channels.

Cui Bono? Rothbardian Beneficiaries in Schumpeter’s Competitive Struggle

Rothbard’s cui bono asks who gains from state action, especially when cloaked in public-purpose rhetoric. In the Eurobond case, the winners align precisely with Schumpeter’s political competitors:

The ruling political elite: Kenyatta’s Jubilee coalition secured office in 2013 through competitive vote struggle. The bond provided discretionary resources, fungible cash outside tight domestic scrutiny, for patronage, pending bills to politically connected contractors, and maintaining fiscal appearances. No major prosecutions followed; investigations were stymied. Power was preserved and transferred (Ruto succeeded Kenyatta in 2022).Connected insiders and rent-seekers: Payments to Anglo-Leasing remnants and facilitators (Kamani, Perera) suggest kickbacks or debt-clearing for allies. Inflated energy-sector projects (e.g., rural electrification ballooning from Ksh 9.9 billion to Ksh 34 billion) created plausible cover for overruns benefiting cronies.International financial actors: Banks earned fees on issuance and transfers. Creditors (old syndicated loans) were repaid. Kenya’s debt stock exploded; annual servicing now crowds out development spending. Lenders benefit from interest on what was effectively recycled or untraceable borrowing.The political class broadly: Competitive democracy rewards those who master the “struggle for the vote.” Eurobond proceeds helped suppress domestic borrowing spikes, masking fiscal profligacy during re-election cycles. Ordinary voters saw no proportional infrastructure boom; instead, they face higher taxes, inflation, and a debt-to-GDP ratio that has since surpassed 70 percent with limited visible returns.

The losers? Kenyan taxpayers and future generations. As Rothbard would note, the state’s monopoly on borrowing socializes costs while privatizing gains to the connected. Auditor-General reports confirm the funds were neither deposited nor expended per constitutional requirements. Public participation and accountability, hallmarks of genuine popular rule, were absent.

Synthesizing Kenya Without Politicians’ Rule

Schumpeter reminds us that democracy is a method, not a guarantee of the common good. Kenya’s Eurobond saga empirically demonstrates the method’s predictable outcome under weak constraints: politicians compete, win, and rule in their own interest. The competitive struggle produced a government capable of raising $2.8 billion with minimal immediate voter backlash, then dissipating accountability through offshore opacity, blocked audits, and narrative deflection.

A Kenya without politicians’ rule would therefore require moving beyond Schumpeter’s method alone. It demands hard institutional fetters, strict debt-ceiling rules, mandatory real-time exchequer tracing, independent forensic audits immune to executive interference, and perhaps fiscal referenda for mega-borrowing. Only then might the “people’s vote” translate into genuine popular sovereignty rather than a mere license for elite extraction. Until such reforms, the Eurobond scandal stands as Exhibit A: in Kenya’s democracy, cui bono answers not the people, but the politicians who win the struggle. The debt remains; the benefits accrued elsewhere.



Source link

Tags: AnalysisbonoCuiEurobondRothbardsscandalSchumpeterian
ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

Mamdani Mendacity – Balanced Budgets and $50 World Cup Tickets

Next Post

Old Navy Dresses and Rompers as low as $6!

Related Posts

Canada’s Inflation Problem Is Far From Over

Canada’s Inflation Problem Is Far From Over

by theadvisertimes.com
June 23, 2026
0

Canada’s inflation rate accelerated to 3.2% in May, coming in above expectations and once again exposing the fantasy that inflation...

Mamdani Endorses in New York Dem Congressional Primaries

Mamdani Endorses in New York Dem Congressional Primaries

by theadvisertimes.com
June 22, 2026
0

New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani has endorsed multiple candidates in tomorrow’s Democratic congressional primaries as part of what the New...

The Magic of Money Velocity

The Magic of Money Velocity

by theadvisertimes.com
June 22, 2026
0

For most economists, the velocity of money circulation is an important factor in determining the prices of goods and services....

Can a Phone Be a Cow? (with Philip Auerswald)

Can a Phone Be a Cow? (with Philip Auerswald)

by theadvisertimes.com
June 22, 2026
0

0:37Intro. Russ Roberts: Today is May 26th, 2026, and before introducing today's guest, I want to let listeners know that...

Obama Legacy: As Celebrities Descended Upon Chicago Presidential Center, Across Town Firefighters Were Evacuating Patients From Another Private-Equity-Destroyed Hospital

Obama Legacy: As Celebrities Descended Upon Chicago Presidential Center, Across Town Firefighters Were Evacuating Patients From Another Private-Equity-Destroyed Hospital

by theadvisertimes.com
June 22, 2026
0

It’s difficult to heap enough scorn on the opening ceremony of the Obama Presidential Center event on Juneteenth. The very...

Who Do You Trust? | Mises Institute

Who Do You Trust? | Mises Institute

by theadvisertimes.com
June 22, 2026
0

Trust: allow someone to have, use, or look after (someone or something of importance or value) with confidence: I’d trust...

Next Post
Old Navy Dresses and Rompers as low as !

Old Navy Dresses and Rompers as low as $6!

Women’s Closed-Toe Sandals as low as .37!

Women's Closed-Toe Sandals as low as $19.37!

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Should You Offer a Concession to Get Your Apartment Leased Faster?

Should You Offer a Concession to Get Your Apartment Leased Faster?

June 15, 2026
6 Hotels Where Chase’s Points Boost Yields 2.5x

6 Hotels Where Chase’s Points Boost Yields 2.5x

May 22, 2026
Understanding risk remains a major investor blind spot: TIAA Institute

Understanding risk remains a major investor blind spot: TIAA Institute

June 5, 2026
Anthropic’s confidential S-1 signals summer AI IPO race could heat up fast

Anthropic’s confidential S-1 signals summer AI IPO race could heat up fast

June 2, 2026
Memorial Day 2026: Take Advantage of Food Freebies, Deals

Memorial Day 2026: Take Advantage of Food Freebies, Deals

May 23, 2026
9 Best Cheap Cell Phone Plans That Will Save You Money

9 Best Cheap Cell Phone Plans That Will Save You Money

June 3, 2026
Ship and Debit Explained: Protecting Your Channel Margins

Ship and Debit Explained: Protecting Your Channel Margins

0
Boring is beautiful: Why advisors are avoiding the bull market’s hype

Boring is beautiful: Why advisors are avoiding the bull market’s hype

0
Despite war Nahariya penthouse fetches NIS 5m

Despite war Nahariya penthouse fetches NIS 5m

0
Canada’s Inflation Problem Is Far From Over

Canada’s Inflation Problem Is Far From Over

0
The Future Is an Asset

The Future Is an Asset

0
Air Pollution Study Links Long-Term Exposure to Higher Alzheimer’s Risk in 28 Million Seniors

Air Pollution Study Links Long-Term Exposure to Higher Alzheimer’s Risk in 28 Million Seniors

0
Canada’s Inflation Problem Is Far From Over

Canada’s Inflation Problem Is Far From Over

June 23, 2026
.5M DeFi vault pulled overnight: The wake-up call for traders chasing high yields

$8.5M DeFi vault pulled overnight: The wake-up call for traders chasing high yields

June 22, 2026
Gold steady as investors focus on US-Iran peace talks

Gold steady as investors focus on US-Iran peace talks

June 22, 2026
Ship and Debit Explained: Protecting Your Channel Margins

Ship and Debit Explained: Protecting Your Channel Margins

June 22, 2026
We give people a few days and expect them back as themselves, when the science of loss says grief takes no days off at all, and the shame around admitting that is its own quiet cruelty

We give people a few days and expect them back as themselves, when the science of loss says grief takes no days off at all, and the shame around admitting that is its own quiet cruelty

June 22, 2026
NIA Issues Hot-Weather Warning: Why Seniors Overheat Faster and How to Prevent Heat-Related Illnesses

NIA Issues Hot-Weather Warning: Why Seniors Overheat Faster and How to Prevent Heat-Related Illnesses

June 22, 2026
theadvisertimes.com

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of Business & Financial News, Stock Market Updates, Analysis, and more from the trusted sources.

CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economy
  • Financial Planning
  • Investing
  • Market Analysis
  • Markets
  • Money
  • Personal Finance
  • Startups
  • Stock Market
  • Trading

LATEST UPDATES

  • Canada’s Inflation Problem Is Far From Over
  • $8.5M DeFi vault pulled overnight: The wake-up call for traders chasing high yields
  • Gold steady as investors focus on US-Iran peace talks
  • Our Great Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use, Legal Notices & Disclosures
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

© Copyright 2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading

© Copyright 2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.