Kuwait Times

IMF: Iraq growth to continue despite oil sector volatility

- WASHINGTON:

Iraq’s economic growth is projected to continue amid fiscal expansion although medium-term vulnerabil­ities to oil price volatility have increased significan­tly, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said on Sunday. Reducing oil dependence and ensuring fiscal sustainabi­lity while protecting critical social and investment spending will require a significan­t fiscal adjustment, focused on controllin­g the public wage bill and increasing non-oil tax revenues. In parallel, higher economic growth will be needed to absorb the rapidly expanding labor force, boost nonoil exports and broaden the tax base, the IMF said in a statement following the 2024 Article IV consultati­on with Iraqi officials.

An IMF mission, led by Jean-Guillaume Poulain, met with the Iraqi authoritie­s in Amman during Feb 20–29. “The authoritie­s should therefore seek to enable private sector developmen­t, including through labor market reforms, modernizat­ion of the financial sector and restructur­ing of state-owned banks, pension and electricit­y sector reforms, and continued efforts to improve governance and reduce corruption.

Growth in the non-oil sector has rebounded strongly in 2023 while inflation receded. Supported by increases

in public expenditur­e and solid agricultur­al output, real non-oil GDP is estimated to have grown by 6 percent in 2023 after stalling in 2022. Headline inflation declined from a high of 7.5 percent in January 2023 to 4 percent by year-end, reflecting lower internatio­nal food and energy prices, and the impact of the February 2023 currency revaluatio­n. The current account is expected to have recorded a surplus of 2.6 percent of GDP and internatio­nal reserves increased to $112 billion.

These positive developmen­ts were supported by the normalizat­ion of trade finance and the stabilizat­ion of FX market. After some initial disruption­s following the introducti­on of new anti-money laundering and combating financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) controls on cross-border payments in November 2022, the improved compliance with the new system and the Central Bank of Iraq (CBI)’s initiative­s to cut processing time led to a recovery in trade finance in the second half of 2023. This ensured private sector access to foreign exchange at the official rate for imports and travel purposes, the statement added.

Overall growth is projected to rebound in 2024 and risks are tilted downwards amid heightened uncertaint­y. Non-oil growth momentum will continue in 2024. Larger declines in oil prices or extended OPEC+ cuts could weigh on fiscal and external accounts. If regional tensions escalate, a disruption of shipping routes or damage to the oil infrastruc­ture could result in oil production losses that could outweigh the potential positive impact of higher oil prices.

An ambitious fiscal adjustment would be required to help stabilize debt in the medium term and rebuild fiscal buffers, while protecting critical capital spending. Most of the fiscal adjustment would have to come from reducing current expenditur­e, especially controllin­g the wage bill by limiting mandatory hiring and gradually introducin­g an attrition rule.The authoritie­s should also seek to increase non-oil revenues by broadening the personal income tax base and making it more progressiv­e, reviewing the customs tariff structure, and considerin­g new taxes on luxury items. In parallel, efforts to make revenue and customs administra­tion more efficient should continue, the statement said.

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