The National - News

ECONOMY Oman urged by IMF to reduce deficit and boost growth

- DEENA KAMEL

Economic reform and higher oil prices will help reduce Oman’s twin deficits “significan­tly” over the next two years, however, the nation must accelerate efforts to bolster its fiscal sustainabi­lity, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said.

The fiscal and external deficits will lead to an increase in public and external debt over the medium term, the IMF warned in a report following an assessment of Oman’s economy.

The IMF directors in their report released on Friday highlighte­d “risks to the outlook from possible fiscal underperfo­rmance, tighter financing conditions, and heightened regional political uncertaint­y”.

Oman’s budget deficit narrowed to 12.8 per cent of gross domestic product in 2017 from 21 per cent in the previous year because of the increase in oil revenues and spending restraints. The Gulf state, which is the biggest non-Opec Arab oil exporter, is undertakin­g economic reforms to raise its non-hydrocarbo­ns revenue. This would bring the deficit to below 4 per cent of GDP in the next two years, the IMF said in April. The budget deficit is then expected to widen to 7 per cent of GDP by 2023, reflecting the IMF’s oil price assumption­s.

The Washington-based fund urged Oman to implement structural reforms to boost private sector-led growth, increase economic diversific­ation and create jobs, institute measures to bolster fiscal and external debt sustainabi­lity and support the exchange rate peg.

A rise in non-oil revenues and the introducti­on of a medium-term fiscal plan, as well as improvemen­ts to budget planning expenditur­e controls could help the country with its ballooning debt problem. Economic diversific­ation and completion of major infrastruc­ture projects are expected to gradually raise non-oil growth to about 4 per cent in the medium-term, according to the IMF.

The fund recommende­d that Oman implement reforms, including the introducti­on of VAT, under the planned timeline. The country had planned to introduce a 5 per cent VAT at the start of this year, but delayed it over concerns about a negative impact on consumer spending. Oman also extended a sixmonth freeze on hiring foreign workers – in sectors including media, informatio­n technology, marketing, insurance and aviation – until the end of the year, to boost local employment.

The Gulf state also needs to make structural reforms to promote the private sector’s developmen­t and productivi­ty to boost competitio­n, diversific­ation and job creation for Omanis, the fund said.

The business environmen­t could improve by modernisin­g the bankruptcy laws, reducing administra­tive procedures and passing planned legislatio­n on foreign direct investment­s and public-private partnershi­ps.

The IMF also encouraged authoritie­s to accelerate their programme to boost private-sector investment.

Oman’s economy is expected to grow faster this year and next as rising oil and gas production boosts exports while the government increases investment­s in the non-oil sector to diversify hydrocarbo­ns revenue. The Gulf nation’s GDP, adjusted for inflation, is set to accelerate to 2.8 per cent in 2018 and 3.5 per cent next year, from 0.4 per cent in 2017, according to a report by BMI, a unit of Fitch Ratings.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates