Post Reply 
 
Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
GCC growth to slow by half in 2009: IMF
02-09-2009, 05:48 AM
Post: #1
GCC growth to slow by half in 2009: IMF
DUBAI (February 09 2009): Economic growth of Gulf Arab oil exporters is set to slow by almost half to 3.5 percent this year as the Middle East earns about $300 billion less from crude oil exports, the International Monetary Fund said on Sunday.

Saudi Arabia and five of its neighbours in the world's biggest oil-exporting region are likely to post fiscal deficits amounting to 3.1 percent of gross domestic product, compared with surpluses of 22.8 percent of GDP in 2008, the IMF said.

Real GDP growth in 2009 for the Gulf - including the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman and Bahrain - would fall from 6.8 percent last year, Masood Ahmed, director of the IMF's Middle East and Central Asia Department, said.

"There has been an extraordinary collapse of confidence. Everybody is holding back in making decisions about spending," Ahmed told an economic conference of the IMF's worst global economic outlook since the organisation was created in 1944.

"The global slowdown will clearly have a significant impact on growth through lower exports, tourism, remittances and higher cost of credit." The UAE emirate of Dubai, which in boom years built itself as the Gulf's trade and commerce hub, is now facing a sharp property sector downturn that has led to scores of job cuts and concerns that banks' could suffer from defaults on home loans.

Dubai's economy, which relies on oil for about 3 to 4 percent of GDP, would still grow "slightly less" than 2.5 percent this year down from about 8 percent in 2009, the Dubai government's chief economist Raed Safadi told the IMF briefing.

Safadi called the forecast "conservative" and said it assumed average oil prices of about $48 a barrel this year. Economists have slashed their Gulf economic growth forecasts after the global financial crisis brought an end late last year to a regional economic boom that was fuelled by high oil prices.

Oil prices have tumbled by more than two thirds since hitting record levels above $147 a barrel last July. Other regional economists have been more pessimistic than Safadi, anticipating real GDP growth in Saudi and the UAE to slow to less than 1 percent this year after a rough first half.

"Throughout history, liquidity-fuelled booms end in tears," Marios Maratheftis, regional head of research at Standard Chartered Bank, said at the briefing.

"The entire GCC experienced a liquidity-fuelled boom in recent years. The problem was the central banks did not have enough tools to drain liquidity out of the system."

DOWNSIDE RISKS:

The IMF - which has revised its growth forecasts downward four times in the last eight months - did not provide country-specific growth forecasts on Sunday.

Middle East oil exporters - which also include Algeria, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan and Yemen - are likely to turn current account deficits amounting to $30 billion in 2009 after posting $400 billion in surpluses last year, it said.

Many regional countries are willing to turn fiscal deficits this year to help their economies weather the crisis. Ahmed said Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Oman, Bahrain, Algeria, Iraq and Iran would run budget deficits if oil prices average $50 a barrel.

"By continuing to spend, oil-exporting countries are contributing substantially to supporting global demand and are acting as stabilisers during the global downturn," Ahmed said. "For most countries, this deterioration is from a position of significant strength, and thus can comfortably be sustained by the large stock of reserves that these economies have built up."

But risks to the outlook "are tilted to the downside" as global growth slows to 0.5 percent this year, Ahmed warned.

Policymakers should focus on restoring "normal functioning" of financial markets, while monetary policy should be geared toward unlocking credit markets and fiscal policy should centre on implementing economic stimulus reforms, he said.

"A more prolonged global recession would imply even weaker exports, tourism, and remittances," he said. "If asset price corrections deepen and the impact of asset price corrections feed through to corporate and, ultimately, bank balance sheets, some financial institutions in the region may be under stress." Gulf inflation is set to fall to 6.3 percent in 2009 from 10.6 percent in 2008, while government revenues from oil could drop to $257 billion this year from $460 billion last, he added

http://www.brecorder.com/index.php?id=884520
Quote this message in a reply
Post Reply 


Possibly Related Threads...
Thread: Author Replies: Views: Last Post
  Infrastructure Enhancement Unleashes Growth: Six Highways Project Boosts Sialkot Indu LRE-Azan 0 232 11-22-2023 01:11 PM
Last Post: LRE-Azan
  Real Estate Industry in Pakistan Needs Tax Reforms for Growth and Prosperity LRE-Azan 0 842 01-20-2023 06:53 PM
Last Post: LRE-Azan
  Real estate market hits growth trail again Salman 0 5,051 02-25-2014 01:15 PM
Last Post: Salman
  Punjab Growth Strategy 2018 being evolved: Shahbaz Salman 0 4,250 02-19-2014 04:32 PM
Last Post: Salman
  Deadline for completion of half part of Mareer Chowk expansion project extended Salman 0 4,328 05-24-2013 01:05 PM
Last Post: Salman
  CDA board forms half a dozen committees for implementation Salman 0 4,368 05-01-2013 03:58 PM
Last Post: Salman
  Legal hurdles slow down CDA legal actions Salman 0 3,541 12-26-2012 12:22 PM
Last Post: Salman
  Road widening projects: ‘City-to-motorway travel time will decrease by half an hour’ Salman 0 5,297 07-31-2012 12:42 PM
Last Post: Salman
  ABAD for forming body for increasing growth Salman 0 4,101 04-05-2012 12:16 PM
Last Post: Salman
  World Bank gives $5.5bn aid to Pakistan to boost growth Salman 0 4,544 12-23-2011 01:36 PM
Last Post: Salman
  Slow work intensifying housing shortage Salman 0 3,588 12-10-2011 11:42 AM
Last Post: Salman
  Pakistan ranks second on Arabia Fast Growth platform Salman 0 4,128 12-04-2011 02:21 PM
Last Post: Salman
  New industrial policy aims to sustain growth rate of 8% pa Lahore_Real_Estate 0 4,100 09-06-2011 04:33 PM
Last Post: Lahore_Real_Estate
  Nearly half of flood funds secured, says UN Lahore_Real_Estate 0 2,965 08-18-2010 05:43 PM
Last Post: Lahore_Real_Estate
  Pakistan flood survivors protest slow aid Lahore_Real_Estate 0 3,162 08-16-2010 03:43 PM
Last Post: Lahore_Real_Estate
  ‘Pakistan demography ideal for economic growth, needs planning’ LahoreEstate 0 4,536 02-21-2010 07:20 AM
Last Post: LahoreEstate
  House Building Finance Corporation Limited (HBFC) makes record recovery in 2009 LahoreEstate 0 4,658 02-04-2010 08:36 AM
Last Post: LahoreEstate
  Indians top buyers of Dubai property in 2009 Lahore_Real_Estate 0 3,678 02-03-2010 01:15 PM
Last Post: Lahore_Real_Estate
  Banking spreads rose 19 bps to 7.47% in 2009 LahoreEstate 0 3,704 02-03-2010 09:16 AM
Last Post: LahoreEstate
  National Savings’ investmen records Rs 115 billion investment in first half 2009-10 LahoreEstate 0 3,774 02-03-2010 09:15 AM
Last Post: LahoreEstate

Forum Jump:


User(s) browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)