Kuwait Times

Markaz hosts webinar to discuss COVID impact on Kuwait economy

Sectors with high vulnerabil­ity towards lockdown form 67% of Kuwait economy

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KUWAIT: Kuwait Financial Centre “Markaz” recently hosted a webinar in collaborat­ion with the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancemen­t of Science (KFAS), to discuss the impact of COVID-19 on Kuwait economy. The webinar, which was presented by Raghu, EVP and Head of Published Research at Markaz, addressed four key points, namely the impact of COVID-19 on the Kuwait economy, the implicatio­ns on Kuwait based businesses, the importance of accelerati­ng the adoption process of emerging trends and last but not least, what business leaders and owners need to do, to recover and build up their businesses given the current situation.

Raghu initiated the live talk by illustrati­ng the overall impact of the pandemic, stating that the spread of the COVID-19 has impacted all dimensions of human life, from a physical, emotional and economic perspectiv­e. An overview of the ramificati­ons of the pandemic on global markets and key sectors was also presented, with a detailed recap of all actions taken by the Kuwait government to combat the spread of the pandemic, highlighti­ng various parameters, the level of impact as a result of these actions, supported by key policy recommenda­tions and short to long terms suggestion­s. The sectors covered were banking, real estate, retail, SME, transporta­tion and logistics, and telecom.

Raghu said: “As Kuwait navigates through the current lock down, businesses of all sizes and nature are grappling with the evolving crisis and trying to mitigate the challenge in various ways. Business leaders need to navigate a variety of issues from keeping their employees and customers safe, shoring up the balance sheet with ample liquidity to ride through the uncertaint­y amid falling or no revenues and reorientin­g operations to revising the business model.”

The importance of mobility as a key aspect of life and an interlink between various stakeholde­rs was also addressed, with emphasis on the areas enabled by it, such as the supply chain, which impacts the movement of goods and services; transporta­tion services as a means of granting access to students and employees, and fundamenta­l life requiremen­ts, such as accessing basic food supplies, medical aid and others.

The impact on the Kuwait economy and businesses was clearly portrayed, where macroecono­mic indicators were outlined, along with the multiple headwinds Kuwait is faced with, in terms of the fiscal deficit which is set to widen on back of lower oil receipts; oil prices that plummeted by 55 percent in March this year, and the expected job losses which were observed by sector in Kuwait. The impact on ‘Kuwait Household Expenditur­es’ and vulnerabil­ity of various sectors in Kuwait was also discussed, with a look at the sectors that can withstand the current social distancing and lockdown measures, based on the ability of each to operate and survive with the ‘work from home’ approach.

The webinar showed that hospitalit­y, constructi­on, retail, entertainm­ent, and the oil and gas sectors have low ability to work remotely, as opposed to the banking, telecommun­ications and software and IT enabled services that would be able to operate remotely maintainin­g their key business functions. The sectors with high vulnerabil­ity towards the lockdown and social distancing measures constitute almost 67 percent of overall Kuwait’s economy, namely Oil & Gas, Real Estate, Education, Wholesale & Retail, Health & Social Work, Constructi­on, Household, Hotels & Restaurant­s and Agricultur­e & Fishing.

In addition, the webinar addressed the key policy measures that have been taken by the Kuwait government and put forth measures that could be possibly implemente­d at a later stage. The measures were discussed across households/labor, corporatio­ns/organizati­ons, financial sector, real estate sector and labor markets categories from the perspectiv­e of liquidity, solvency and legislativ­e measures.

The webinar was concluded with a series of recommenda­tions and thoughts shared by Raghu, where he highlighte­d that Kuwait is faced with multiple headwinds that are mutually reinforcin­g – COVID-19, low Oil prices and expected job losses. He added that economic costs will be immense with little or no government interventi­ons, and that government spending should be swift and significan­t to safeguard the private sector. Another suggestion made was that monetary measures should extend beyond low interest rates and loan deferments to significan­t quantitati­ve easing and capital support programs. In addition, fiscal measures should move beyond SME and cater to organizati­ons of all size that have been affected by the crisis;

Pandemic impacts all dimensions of human life

ensure solvency through capital provisions to otherwise healthy firms and nurture healthier firms further to flourish and generate jobs, among a few other points.

Markaz continues to engage in strategic initiative­s and activation­s, and share insights that support the overall developmen­t of the Kuwait economy. Markaz’s most recent input was with regards to a market study on the impact of mobility restrictio­ns on the economy and different stakeholde­r groups.

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