Khaleej Times

Oman to create 25,000 state jobs by year-end

- Alaa Shahine

dubai — Oman pledged to create 25,000 public sector jobs by December, a move that risks adding to a budget gap that was the Gulf ’s widest last year.

The government will follow up with additional measures to address the lack of jobs in the sultanate, the state-run Oman News Agency reported on Wednesday, citing the cabinet’s decision a day earlier. Unemployme­nt was 17.5 per cent in 2016, according to the World Bank.

The move has echoes of the government’s pledge to create 50,000 jobs in 2011. Oman’s budget deficit was about 21 per cent of gross domestic product in 2016, the highest in the six-nation Gulf Cooperatio­n Council, according to Internatio­nal Monetary Fund data. Its gross debt ratio was almost three times that of Saudi Arabia — the region’s biggest economy.

“It’s a tough balancing act for the sultanate, and I can see why weakening growth and ready access to funding would encourage the authoritie­s to spend,” said Simon Williams, HSBC Holdings’ chief economist for central and eastern Europe, the Middle East and North Africa, adding that the government’s financial position should give it pause.

“Long-term stability requires sustained adjustment, even at the cost of short-term pain.” Oman has smaller oil reserves and less of a cushion in government savings than its wealthier neighbours, making it vulnerable to the impact of lower oil prices that has depressed growth across the region.

Moody’s Investors Services cut Oman’s rating it its second-lowest investment grade in July, citing the sultanate’s limited progress in addressing structural vulnerabil­ities. Oman has a subinvestm­ent grade status at S&P Global Ratings.

Oman’s benchmark MSM30 Index of stocks has retreated 9.4 per cent this year. The hiring plan could spur private consumptio­n amid slow growth in the non-hydrocarbo­n sector, said Carla Slim, an economist at Standard Chartered in Dubai. She expects Oman’s 2017 budget deficit to exceed the government’s target of OR11.7 billion ($30.4 billion), though higher oil prices this year should narrow the deficit relative to 2016. — Bloomberg

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