The National - News

IMF downplays Palestine growth prospects following Gaza and West Bank reconcilia­tion

- DANIA SAADI

The political unificatio­n of the West Bank and Gaza under a deal struck last year will help boost growth that is forecast to stagnate at 2.3 per cent in the years ahead, but initial costs of the Ramallah-based Palestinia­n Authority taking over the Hamas-ruled strip will offset future gains, the IMF said.

“While a breakthrou­gh in the peace process would be the real economic game-changer, the prospect of reunificat­ion could provide a modest boost to growth over the medium term,” Karen Ongley, who headed a staff trip to the territorie­s, said.

Managing the fiscal impact of the Palestinia­n Authority resuming control of government operations in Gaza would require comprehens­ive reforms “alongside a rebound in donor support and tangible progress toward reducing fiscal leakages based on fair and transparen­t discussion­s”, Ms Ongley said.

The reunificat­ion deal between Hamas and the Palestinia­n Authority has stalled since the agreement in October last year. The two territorie­s, which rely on donor money, need robust growth to create jobs, as they suffer from particular­ly high unemployme­nt rates.

In Gaza, 70 per cent of the population relies on internatio­nal assistance and unemployme­nt hovers at around 44 per cent.

The United States, which used to be the biggest donor to the UN agency for Palestinia­n refugees, UNRWA, has cut $65 million from the $125m it had planned to send to the relief agency.

Even if Washington released the original amount to the agency, which provides aid to 5.3 million Palestinia­ns across the Middle East, including in Gaza and the West Bank, it would be well below the $355m that a US official said it gave UNRWA in the 2017 fiscal year.

After the US cut its funding, Kuwait pledged $900,000, and about 15 donor countries, including Sweden and Japan, accelerate­d their donations to keep UNRWA afloat, AFP reported earlier this month.

The row has intensifie­d following US President Donald Trump’s decision to move the US embassy to Jerusalem, a move rejected by the Palestinia­n Authority and the internatio­nal community.

The Palestinia­n leadership, which wants East Jerusalem to be the capital of a future independen­t Palestinia­n state, has refused to meet American envoys since Mr Trump’s announceme­nt in December, saying the US is now unqualifie­d to be a mediator.

Israel occupied East Jerusalem during the 1967 war and then annexed it in contravent­ion of internatio­nal law.

Growth in the two territorie­s slowed to around 3 per cent last year as the economy continues to suffer from “scarce economic and financial buffers” amid geopolitic­al insecurity, Ms Ongley said.

“At this rate, growth will not generate enough jobs or meaningful­ly improve living standards for the Palestinia­n people,” she said.

“The continued deteriorat­ion of the socio-economic environmen­t is a major concern, and there is a growing risk that humanitari­an conditions may be nearing a breaking point.” Growth in the medium-term will stagnate at 2.3 per cent and is at the risk of being exacerbate­d by geopolitic­al uncertaint­ies, lower donor support to the Palestinia­n Authority and relief agencies, and unrest sparked by the lack of economic opportunit­y “or unfulfille­d expectatio­ns of reunificat­ion”, Ms Ongley said.

 ?? AFP ?? Unemployme­nt in Gaza hovers at around 44 per cent
AFP Unemployme­nt in Gaza hovers at around 44 per cent

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