Kuwait Times

WB: Palestinia­n economy could shrink up to 11%

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JERUSALEM: The coronaviru­s crisis could cause an already constraine­d Palestinia­n economy to shrink by as much as 11 percent in the coming year, the World Bank said on Monday.

In a report, the bank also cautioned that the Palestinia­n Authority, which exercises limited self-rule in the occupied West Bank, could face a financing gap of more than $1.5 billion in 2020 due to reduced revenues and increased health spending. Prior to the novel coronaviru­s outbreak, the bank had predicted 2.5 percent growth in the Palestinia­n economy in the coming year.

“We now project a full-year decline of at least 7.6 percent, based on a gradual return to normality from (coronaviru­s) containmen­t and up to 11 percent in the case of a slower recovery or further restrictio­ns due to another outbreak,” the report said. The Palestinia­n economy, which has long faced Israeli constraint­s on the movement of people and goods, grew by only 1 percent in 2019, the World Bank said.

Israel has cited security concerns for such restrictio­ns in territory it captured in the 1967 Middle East war. The bank praised “decisive action” by the Palestinia­n Authority to try to halt the spread of infection, including a state of emergency declared in March - and recently eased - that closed off several major Palestinia­n cities. But, the bank said, the COVID-19 outbreak would likely deepen unemployme­nt, especially in the West Bank where a large number of workers had lost their jobs in the tourism industry.

It cited 13.7 percent unemployme­nt in the West Bank in the fourth quarter of 2019 and a figure of 42.7 percent in the Hamas Islamist-run Gaza Strip, whose borders are tightly controlled by Israel and Egypt. West Bank health authoritie­s have reported 388 cases of coronaviru­s, with two deaths. In Gaza, there have been 61 confirmed cases and 1 death. — Reuters

 ??  ?? TOKYO: A pedestrian wearing a face mask walks past an electric quotation board displaying the Nikkei 225 Index on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo. —AFP
TOKYO: A pedestrian wearing a face mask walks past an electric quotation board displaying the Nikkei 225 Index on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo. —AFP

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