President William Ruto on Monday, July 6 assented to the Central Bank of Kenya (Amendment) Bill, 2026, ushering in sweeping reforms aimed at strengthening the CBK’s capacity to safeguard financial stability, improve banking oversight, and modernise Kenya’s monetary policy framework.
The new law introduces a distinct legal framework separating the Central Bank’s routine monetary policy operations from Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA). The move will improve Kenya’s preparedness to respond to financial crises while protecting taxpayers and the banking sector.
Under the amendment, ELA can only be extended to banks that meet strict conditions on solvency, viability, and systemic risk. The provision aims to separate ordinary liquidity management from extraordinary interventions during periods of financial distress.
One of the key reforms elevates financial system stability and sound banking regulation as secondary objectives of the Central Bank, while retaining price stability as its primary mandate. The law formally recognises the CBK’s role in promoting the integrity, resilience, and proper functioning of Kenya’s financial system.
Additionally, to enhance governance, nominees for Deputy Governor positions will now be vetted and approved by the National Assembly before appointment. The provision aligns their process with that of the Governor and reinforces parliamentary oversight of senior leadership at the monetary authority.
The amendment also gives statutory backing to the CBK’s training mandate through the Central Bank of Kenya Institute of Monetary Studies. It also provides a legal framework for collaboration with national, regional, and international institutions to enhance knowledge sharing and cross-border cooperation.
The law further updates various provisions by replacing references to the defunct Deposit Protection Fund Board with the Kenya Deposit Insurance Corporation, bringing the Act in line with the current deposit protection framework.
It also expands legal clarity on CBK’s authority to deal in gold and other precious metals as part of reserve management. This will support growth of Kenya’s mining sector and aligns Kenya with practices in Tanzania, Ghana, and South Africa.
Also signed into law the Parliamentary Pensions (Amendment) Bill, 2023, bringing in reforms that align the parliamentary pension framework with the Constitution and extend benefits to both Members of the National Assembly and the Senate.
The legislation updates the Parliamentary Pensions Act of 1983, which became outdated after the promulgation of the 2010 Constitution established a bicameral Parliament. The new law formally recognises both the National Assembly and the Senate in the administration of parliamentary pensions and ensures senators are entitled to benefits under the same framework as MPs.
Among the major reforms, the law redefines “child” to mean a person below 18 years, up from 16 years, to conform with the Constitution.
The Act further reconstitutes the Parliamentary Pensions Management Committee and the Appeals Committee to include representation from both Houses, reflecting Kenya’s bicameral structure.
To preserve public service pension policy, the amended law retains gratuity payments only for legislators who serve less than five years.
