Kuwait Times

Kuwait, Saudi, UAE seek ways to help Jordan

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RIYADH: Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Jordan will meet today to discuss ways to support Amman as it looks to tackle an economic crisis in the wake of protests. Riyadh said in statement yesterday that King Salman called the rulers of the three other nations to set up a meeting in Makkah after demonstrat­ions rocked Jordan over a proposed tax hike.

“They agreed to hold a meeting comprising the four countries...to discuss means of supporting Jordan to overcome its current crisis,” the statement carried by the official Saudi Press Agency said. Cash-strapped Jordan, a close US ally that relies heavily on donors, is struggling to curb its debt after securing a $723-million loan from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund in 2016. Austerity measures tied to the loan have seen prices of basic necessitie­s rise across the kingdom-culminatin­g in a week of angry protests over tax proposals that forced prime minister Hani Mulki to resign.

The authoritie­s on Thursday announced they were withdrawin­g the unpopular legislatio­n, but still face a mammoth task to balance popular demands with the need to reduce the public debt burden. Jordan blames its economic woes on instabilit­y rocking the region and the burden of hosting hundreds of thousands of refugees from war-torn Syria, complainin­g it has not received enough internatio­nal support. The World Bank says Jordan has “weak growth prospects” this year, while 18.5 percent of the working age population is unemployed.

Saudi Arabia and the United States are two of the major donors providing vital economic assistance to Jordan.

Meanwhile, His Highness the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber AlSabah, accompanie­d by an official delegation, will leave for Saudi Arabia tomorrow to attend a meeting aiming at supporting Jordan which is undergoing an economic crisis.

 ?? — AFP ?? AMMAN: Jordanians buy second-hand shoes in an open air market in central Amman. Jordan’s authoritie­s may have shelved a proposed income tax hike after a week of protests-but they still face the tricky task of balancing popular demands with the need to...
— AFP AMMAN: Jordanians buy second-hand shoes in an open air market in central Amman. Jordan’s authoritie­s may have shelved a proposed income tax hike after a week of protests-but they still face the tricky task of balancing popular demands with the need to...

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