Khaleej Times

UAE hints at more cuts in subsidies

Products and services such as electricit­y targeted

- — AFP

davos — The sharp drop in the price of oil, the lifeblood of Gulf economies, is an opportunit­y to end subsidies and introduce reforms in the energy-rich region, ministers said on Friday.

“With low prices... it is the right time” to cut subsidies on oil products, Kuwait’s Finance Minister Anas Al Saleh said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

In a panel on the future of economic reform in the Arab world, Saleh — also Kuwait’s acting oil minister — said that record low oil prices would make the lifting of subsidies on fuel products easier on consumers.

“We saw an opportunit­y to have people do the right thing, which is to pay the right cost of energy,” said UAE Energy Minister Suhail Al Mazrouei.

“We need to rethink about major reforms that make our budgets independen­t from oil revenues,” he said.

After liberalisi­ng fuel prices in June, Mazrouei said the UAE is looking into lifting subsidies on other

products and services, including on electricit­y.

“That’s not healthy,” he said, speaking of gas and power sold to electricit­y providers at subsidised rates, stressing the need to “apply internatio­nal prices”.

The head of Bahrain’s Economic Developmen­t Board, Khalid Al Rumaihi, went further, describing the sharp drop in oil revenues as a “blessing in disguise”, because it provides an “opportunit­y for reforms”.

He named fiscal reforms and widening the economic base in Gulf countries as potential outcomes of lower oil revenues, which represent the bulk of receipts for most Gulf countries.

Saleh argued that the government­s will need to formulate a way to help needy citizens when oil rebounds.

“What if it goes up again? We’ll have to look at rationalis­ing subsidies...to those who need” them, he said.

Unlike Kuwait and the UAE, Bahrain is a minor oil exporter.

What if it goes up again? We’ll have to look at rationalis­ing subsidies... to those who need them

Anas Saleh, Kuwaiti minister

It recently cut subsidies on diesel and petrol.

Kuwait began selling diesel and kerosene at market prices at the start of 2015, and on Thursday its Amir announced plans to raise the prices of petrol, electricit­y and water.

Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, also took unpreceden­ted measures to cut subsidies on energy products, as it posted a record budget deficit of $98 billion in 2015.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has urged the Gulf states to cut their subsidies’ bills as their revenues shrink.

Oil prices have shed about 75 per cent in 18 months due to a supply glut, weak demand, overproduc­tion and a slowing global economy.

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