International Monetary Fund experts arrived in Kenya this week to study how the country fights corruption. The team wants to finish their research and give leaders a detailed report before 2025 ends. Kenya asked for this special review after talks happened back in March about fighting dishonest government practices. The IMF workers will stay until June 29 to examine different parts of the government. Their job focuses on finding weak spots where corruption might happen and suggesting ways to make things better.
The visiting team will not make any public announcements when their work finishes. Kenya gets to decide whether people can see the final report or keep it private. This type of review only happens when a country asks for help and the IMF agrees to provide it. The experts break their work into different stages that include planning meetings and main research trips. They write up everything they find and give advice about how to fix problems.
Kenya expects another IMF team to visit in September for regular economic health checks. Central Bank Governor Kamau Thugge said his country will use those September meetings to ask for new funding. The previous loan program ended early because Kenya missed important financial targets. These September talks usually cover money policies, government spending, and banking rules that affect the whole economy.
The visiting team will not make any public announcements when their work finishes. Kenya gets to decide whether people can see the final report or keep it private. This type of review only happens when a country asks for help and the IMF agrees to provide it. The experts break their work into different stages that include planning meetings and main research trips. They write up everything they find and give advice about how to fix problems.
Kenya expects another IMF team to visit in September for regular economic health checks. Central Bank Governor Kamau Thugge said his country will use those September meetings to ask for new funding. The previous loan program ended early because Kenya missed important financial targets. These September talks usually cover money policies, government spending, and banking rules that affect the whole economy.