The National - News

Oman prioritise­s growth and well-being of civil servants with higher outlay of 12.9m rials in 2019

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Oman sticks to growth targets and prioritise­s the welfare of its civil servants with its 2019 budget, analysts say, after the country announced a budget expenditur­e of 12.9 billion rials (Dh123.1bn) on Monday.

This year’s spending is about 3.1 per cent higher than in 2018. The 2019 deficit is forecast at 2.8bn rials, slightly lower than last year’s deficit of 3bn rials.

The government’s revenues in 2019, based on an oil price of $58 per barrel, has been set at 10.1bn rials.

Analysts said that Oman’s 2019 budget keeps its economic developmen­t targets on track.

“Many expected the government would slow down in spending in the current economic scenario but this is a very brave budget that has bigger spending than in 2018,” Hamed Al Busaidy, an economic analyst working for Oman Capital Developmen­t in Muscat, told The National.

“It is all about keeping the economic targets going in education, health and infrastruc­ture.”

The statement from the official Oman News Agency said that 86 per cent of the deficit will be financed by bank borrowing and the remaining will be covered by withdrawin­g from the state reserve funds.

According to its figures, 76 per cent of expenditur­e will be on salaries paid to civil servants, an increase of about 5 per cent increase from the 2018 budget.

Other analysts said that the government had in mind the welfare of its working-class citizens when it put the budget together. “The civil servants make up about 70 per cent of total workers in the country and most of them are Omanis,” said Khalifa Al Subhi, a retired investment banker.

“The 2019 spending will make sure the government will keep on paying the civil servants already working in the ministries.

“Their welfare is important and Oman doesn’t want to be caught in the middle ... when oil prices go down below the $58 per barrel target.”

Oman is the biggest nonOpec oil producer in the Middle East, pumping out about 970,000 barrels per day. It was severely affected by the oil slump in 2015. Its average oil price income in 2018 was at $62 per barrel, a drop from $120 per barrel in 2014.

“Oman may have a little problem reaching the revenues forecast for 2019 but it might pull it off since at $58 per barrel, things might swing its way, unless oil prices fall below that that level,” Mr Al Subhi added.

Oman is the biggest non-Opec oil producer in the Middle East, pumping out about 970,000 barrels per day

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