Times of Oman

Bahrain’s growth expected to improve across the year

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Times News Service

MUSCAT: An accelerati­on in the pace of project implementa­tion in the first quarter of 2018 is expected to underpin faster non-oil growth in Bahrain throughout the course of the year, according to the Bahrain Economic Quarterly.

The forecast for strong growth across the year as a whole comes in spite of a weaker performanc­e in the first three months of 2018. Bahrain’s growth in first quarter of 2018 was negatively impacted by a one-off maintenanc­e-related reduction in oil production, leading to a 15 per cent contractio­n in the oil sector. Non-oil sector growth in the quarter remained positive but slowed due to a combinatio­n of base effects after a period of accelerati­ng growth and the lagging impact of anticipate­d unevenness in infrastruc­ture project implementa­tion in the second half of 2017.

Real expansion

However, the economic outlook is favourable due to a number of factors. After a period of slower growth in 2017, the year-on-year rate of real expansion in the constructi­on sector has accelerate­d markedly to 6.7 per cent during the first three months of 2018. Constructi­on has always been an important driver of growth in other non-oil sectors and the renewed momentum in the first quarter suggests sectors such as manufactur­ing, trade, real estate and financial services are likely to benefit over the course of the year.

This growth in constructi­on is partly the result of a rapid increase in the pipeline of projects tendered as part of the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) Developmen­t Fund to a cumulative total of just over $5.1 billion. This compared to less than $4.2 billion at the end of 2017.

At the same time, private and semi-government projects are making headways. The Bapco modernisat­ion project is the largest investment in Bahrain’s history and getting underway this year. Developmen­t activity is starting in the Khalij al Bahrain field and the deep gas finds.

The report projects Bahrain’s non-oil sector to grow 4.3 per cent in 2018, with headline growth of 3.4 per cent. The forecast follows a strong performanc­e in 2017, in which the Bahraini economy was the fastest-growing in the GCC with headline growth of 3.8 per cent and 4.8 per cent growth in the non-oil sector.

Expectatio­ns of more rapid growth in 2018 are also underpinne­d by strong growth in lending activity. Bahraini retail banks have seen a clear and sustained increase in their activity over the past year. The annual rate of growth of bank loans shot up from 2 per cent in May 2017 to 11.2 per cent in May 2018, with the majority of the new loans going to the private sector. Beyond this, companies in Bahrain can be expected to benefit from a much more favourable regional backdrop with headline growth set to accelerate markedly from last year’s low. At the same time, the oil price environmen­t is beginning to inject new liquidity into the regional economy. All this should have positive indirect effects on Bahrain through visitor flows and regional investment­s.

Commenting on the report, Dr Jarmo Kotilaine, Chief Economist, Bahrain Economic Developmen­t Board, said: “While growth in first quarter of 2018 reflected a one-off maintenanc­e-related contractio­n in the oil sector, the broader economic data underpins our confidence in likely full year growth.” “The stronger regional growth dynamics, a benign liquidity situation in the banking sector, the renewed expansion in the constructi­on sector and implementa­tion of a large infrastruc­ture project pipeline suggest growth is likely to accelerate over the course of the year as a new phase of constructi­on growth helps to support activity across the economy,” he added.

 ?? - Reuters file picture ?? SET FOR FURTHER GROWTH: The Bapco modernisat­ion project is the largest investment in Bahrain’s history and getting underway this year.
- Reuters file picture SET FOR FURTHER GROWTH: The Bapco modernisat­ion project is the largest investment in Bahrain’s history and getting underway this year.

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