Kenya, along with other African frontier market nations, has been frozen out of international capital markets since early last year.
However, it expects $250 million from syndicated loans this month and a $1 billion budgetary support loan from the World Bank in May, Njoroge said.
"This compensates for the $1.2 billion we couldn't get from the market last year."
Njoroge said Kenya is also seeking a new loan under the Fund's Resilience and Sustainability Trust (RST) to help countries ensure sustainable growth.
Stubbornly high inflation that provoked a larger than expected rate hike last month was largely due to high food prices.