Times of Oman

Algeria bans import of 900 products to curb trade deficit

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ALGIERS: Algeria has banned the import of 900 products including cell phones, household appliances and vegetables in a bid to cut spending following a drop in earnings from oil and gas, a trade ministry document showed on Tuesday.

The temporary ban, which took effect on Sunday, is the most drastic action undertaken yet by the North African Opec oil producer to curb a ballooning deficit caused by the fall in crude oil prices since mid-2014. Algeria relies on oil and gas for 60 per cent of the state budget but earnings from the sector have halved since oil prices collapsed hitting the state-dominated economy hard.

Restrictio­ns

The restrictio­ns will also apply to furniture, most vegetables, some meats and fruits, cheeses, chocolates, pastries, pasta, juice, bottled waters and some building materials, according to the ministry document which was seen by Reuters and whose authentici­ty was confirmed by an official.

“The import suspension of those products is limited in time, and will be lifted gradually with or without maintainin­g or increas- ing taxes and other duties,” the document said.

The import ban — following a 30 per cent rise in taxes and customs duties already imposed on some of these products from January 1 — risked upsetting Algeria’s younger generation, many of whom struggle to find jobs in an economy where unemployme­nt stands at 12 per cent.

The fall in crude oil prices has put huge strain on the economy and thrown down a big challenge to the leadership around veteran President Abdelaziz Bouteflika, 80, who has been in power for almost two decades. His poor health following a stroke in 2013 has prompted political manoeuvrin­g behind the scenes. “This kind of restrictio­ns is bad for all consumers as it limit their choices. With the new policies, the black market will also expand, causing higher prices and hurting our purchasing power,” said Ali Diji, a 30-oldyear state bank employee.

With the new ban, the government hopes to bring down the import bill to $30 billion this year from a projected $45 billion for all of 2017 and $46.7 billion the previous year.

Analysts say the measure is just a temporary solution as Algeria needs to get serious about ending its dependency on oil and gas revenues, a plan for years in the works with few results to show.

Other reforms

“It is only with the diversific­ation of the national economy and other reforms that the economic situation can improve,” consultant and economist Brahim Guendouzi told El Watan newspaper.

Algeria has been trying to attract more investment but bureaucrac­y and lack of attractive laws has held back interest. Some elites in the North African country have resisted opening up the economy too much.

That situation has forced Algeria to rely heavily on imports to meet the needs of the nation’s 40 million people, causing increasing spending on subsidies as authoritie­s seek to preserve social stability.

The import ban replaces a license system, whereby importers had to apply for a licence to buy from overseas, which had shown its limitation­s, a senior official at the trade ministry said. Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/business

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