Khaleej Times

RAK, Sharjah real GDP to grow faster in 2018

- Waheed Abbas — waheedabba­s@khaleejtim­es.com

dubai — Real GDP growth of Ras Al Khaimah and Sharjah will increase in 2018 as compared to last year on the back of increased capital expenditur­es in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, a new report said.

Global ratings agency S&P estimates real GDP growth of 2.5 per cent for Ras Al Khaimah in 2018 as compared to 1.5 per cent last year, supported by a recovery in regional demand and increased capital expenditur­e in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

“We forecast that RAK’s economic expansion will average 2.5 per cent over 2018-2021. We expect the increase in oil prices compared with 2017 will support regional demand. Increased business activities and capital spending ahead of Expo 2020 in Dubai should also support medium-term growth. We estimate RAK’s GDP per capita at $28,500 in 2018 and expect it will average at about $29,300 over the forecast period,” S&P analysts said in a note released on Saturday.

Unemployme­nt rate in the emirate has been remaining steady at 3.8 per cent over the years.

Commenting on Sharjah, S&P expects the emirate’s economy will expand at about 2 per cent over 2018-2021, with a slight accelerati­on in 2020, supported by the manufactur­ing, constructi­on and tourism sectors. It sees real GDP growth inching higher from 2 per cent last year to 2.1 per cent this year.

“We expect the fiscal position to strengthen over the next two years, supported by various revenue-raising measures, increased transfer payments from government-related entities [GREs] and Sharjah’s share of receipts from the UAE-wide value-added tax,” S&P analysts said.

RAK outlook revised

S&P has revised Ras Al Khaimah’s outlook for long- and shortterm foreign and local currency sovereign credit ratings from stable to negative due to fiscal position weakening.

However, it affirmed the emirate’s “A/A-“rating and also maintained Sharjah’s “BBB+A/-2” rating with stable outlook.

S&P said negative outlook for RAK reflects the risk that the government’s fiscal position may weaken beyond its current projection­s. And if a downgrade occurred, it could lower the rating by more than one notch.

“We could lower the ratings if our fiscal or debt assessment­s were to come under pressure. This could happen, for example, if the government were to post significan­t or persistent fiscal deficits, or if interest payments were to remain above 5 per cent of revenues on average over the forecast period of 2018-2021. This could occur due to government measures yielding lower revenues or higherthan-expected debt servicing costs,” S&P said in a note released on Saturday.

The ratings agency noted that it could revise the outlook to stable if RAK maintained fiscal surpluses and debt service costs.

S&P sees only a small increase in revenue from expected VAT transfers from the UAE federal government.

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