The National - News

BAHRAIN FORECASTS GDP OF MORE THAN 3% ON NON-OIL ACTIVITY

▶ The state developmen­t agency projection is more bullish than the IMF forecast of 2.3% in 2017

- SARAH TOWNSEND

Bahrain, the smallest GCC economy, projects annual GDP growth of above 3 per cent for the next two years led by the non-oil sector, but the economy will continue to grapple with high public debt levels, according to the chief economist of the Bahrain Economic Developmen­t Board (EDB), the state investment agency.

In the first half of 2017, yearon-year growth accelerate­d to 3.4 per cent. GDP growth for the upcoming fourth quarter is predicted to reach 3.3 per cent as a conservati­ve estimate, according to Jarmo Kotilaine.

In 2016, Bahrain’s GDP grew 3.2 per cent – almost entirely led by the non-oil sector, which expanded by 4 per cent.

“There is good momentum in the economy, and the overall business environmen­t is looking more optimistic due to the positive impact of stabilisin­g oil prices,” said Mr Kotilaine.

The agency expects growth for this year to slow to 3.1 per cent and annual non-oil growth to hover around 3 per cent in the medium term, he said.

The agency’s projection are more bullish than the IMF forecast.

In August, the IMF projected Bahrain’s real GDP growth would slow to 2.3 per cent and 1.6 per cent in 2017 and 2018, reflecting ongoing fiscal consolidat­ion and weaker investor sentiment. GDP growth for 2016 stood at 3 per cent, the IMF said.

Particular growth sectors include: hotels and restaurant­s, which reported 12.9 per cent year-on-year growth in the first half of 2017; “social and personal services” (including private healthcare and education), which recorded 10 per cent growth; financial services, with 7.9 per cent; and transporta­tion and communicat­ions (ICT), which registered 7 per cent growth.

“Overall, we would expect the same growth rates for these sectors in 2018,” said Mr Kotilaine.

“There is a fairly consistent pattern that has emerged, and the factors that have been driving that pattern – above all the infrastruc­ture pipeline and to some extent regulatory reform – remain very much in place.”

Beyond 2019, Bahrain’s real GDP growth is likely to diminish slightly as a result of fiscal consolidat­ion, and other reform measures that include the introducti­on of a GCC-wide 5 per cent value added tax (VAT).

Mr Kotilaine said VAT was “the biggest single item in terms of possible remedies” for Bahrain’s substantia­l fiscal imbalance.

Government debt in Bahrain is forecast to have increased to 83.7 per cent of GDP in 2016 from 44 per cent of GDP in 2014, placing Bahrain in breach of the 60 per cent debtto-GDP stability criteria, according to the World Bank.

This year, ratings agencies including Moody’s and S&P Global Ratings downgraded the country’s sovereign credit rating, citing weak external liquidity and increasing financial risk.

On Saturday, BMI Research, a unit of Fitch Group, said Bahrain is likely to require “a bailout by regional peers over the coming months in order to cover its debt payments and maintain the currency peg, amid dwindling reserves and rising debt-servicing costs”.

“Absolutely [VAT] will go some way towards helping to reduce the public debt,” Mr Kotilaine said.

“What is important about VAT is that for the first time ever it will create a broad revenue base in the non-oil sector of the economy.”

Other planned taxes, such as the GCC-wide excise tax on harmful goods including cigarettes and fizzy drinks, as well as ongoing improvemen­ts in the administra­tion of real estate taxes in Bahrain will also help, the chief economist added.

Bahrain has yet to annouced a date for the introducti­on of VAT and excise tax.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates