The National - News

IMF SATISFIED WITH SAUDI ARABIA’S NEW 2023 DEADLINE FOR FISCAL BALANCE

▶ The kingdom last year revealed its biggest budget yet for 2018 and allocated 200bn riyals to stimulus programme

- DANIA SAADI

Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, is pursuing an “appropriat­e” policy by pushing back its deadline of achieving a balanced budget to 2023, giving the economy a breather as it slows down fiscal reforms to propel growth that stagnated last year, the IMF mission chief to Saudi Arabia said.

“We are happy to see that the government has now set a later date for returning the budget to balance and we think that is entirely appropriat­e. If they can achieve a budget balance by 2023 that would be fine,” said Tim Callen.

The kingdom last year revealed its biggest budget yet for 2018, allocated 200 billion riyals (Dh195.9bn) to a fouryear stimulus programme and approved bonuses for public sector employees, measures that are aimed at accelerati­ng growth hurt by austerity and low oil prices.

The IMF had last year called on the kingdom to ease the pace of fiscal consolidat­ion that led to a 0.5 per cent economic contractio­n, compared with 1.7 per cent growth in 2016.

“This is not a call to stop the fiscal reforms that are going on,” said Mr Callen. “This is a call to implement them at a slower pace than the government had previously planned.”

The Arab world’s largest economy began tightening its purse strings in 2016 to help narrow its fiscal deficit, which reached a record 367bn riyals in 2015 in the wake of plunging oil prices. But fiscal consolidat­ion efforts, which included increasing energy prices and freezing public sector salary hikes, have curbed Saudi Arabia’s economic growth.

Government revenues have been further affected by a global oil pact to curb oil production that began in January 2017 and was extended until the end of this year. The agreement to trim 1.8 million barrels of oil per day is intended to shore up oil prices that have risen to about $70 per barrel.

But last year the kingdom unveiled an expansiona­ry budget for 2018 with 978bn riyals in expenditur­es, a 5.6 per cent increase from 2017.

The kingdom is also implementi­ng an economic overhaul plan and various reforms under the 2020 National Transforma­tion Programme and its over-arching Vision 2030 agenda to help wean the country off oil income and create new revenue streams.

In January the fund revised up its projection­s for Saudi Arabia, where growth will reach 1.6 per cent in 2018 and 2.2 in 2019, 0.5 and 0.6 percentage points higher than its October forecasts.

Mr Callen said the upgrade in forecasts is mainly owing to higher projection­s for non-oil growth, which will reach 2.1 per cent in 2018. The oil sector will expand 0.9 per cent this year.

“The government spent a lot of money at the end of 2017 and it also is planning a higher level of spending in 2018 than we previously expected so that should provide for non-oil growth,” said Mr Callen.

“Oil prices have increased and higher oil prices are generally good for confidence in the economy and the private sector.”

Saudi Arabia is even more bullish, forecastin­g growth of 2.7 per cent this year and next, thanks to its new spending measures.

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