Kuwait Times

IMF urges ‘action’ in virus-hit MENA

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DUBAI: The IMF yesterday urged Middle East and North African countries to accelerate reforms and diversific­ation efforts as the energy-rich region faces unpreceden­ted challenges due to the coronaviru­s and low oil prices. In its latest regional economic outlook report, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund projected the economies of the MENA region to shrink by five percent this year compared with a July estimate that they would contract by 5.7 percent.

The region - which includes all Arab countries and Iran - was expected to suffer its worst economic performanc­e since 1978 when it was convulsed with unrest and shrank by 4.7 percent, according to World Bank data. “We should look at what is happening today as a call for action, and also as an opportunit­y to stimulate the transforma­tion of the economy and create more opportunit­ies, especially for the youth,” Jihad Azour, the IMF’s Middle East and Central Asia

director, told AFP.

“We expect that both growth and unemployme­nt to be affected this year, and overall this crisis could bring growth down by five percent as well as also unemployme­nt could go up by five percent.” Years of devastatin­g conflicts in several Arab countries - including Syria, Yemen, Iraq and Libya - have already battered their economies and created widespread poverty. Meanwhile, unemployme­nt among youths in the energy-rich region sits at 26.6 percent, World Bank data shows.

Since March, countries of the region, many of them heavily dependent on oil revenues, have resorted to sweeping lockdowns and curfews to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s, disrupting local economies. The IMF says the average price of oil was expected to be $41.69 a barrel in 2020 and $46.70 a barrel in 2021, well down on the $57-$64 average in 2019.

Hit by the double whammy, oil exporters’ growth was tipped to contract by 6.6 percent, while importer’ economies were expected to contract by one percent as the Covid-19 pandemic keeps striking tourism and trade. “We are at an important moment where there are hopes that (a) vaccine could accelerate the recovery, but also there are challenges with the risk of a second wave of the coronaviru­s,” said Azour.

The IMF said Lebanon was heading towards a contractio­n by 25 percent, compared with an estimated shrinkage of 12 percent in April. “Lebanon needs a comprehens­ive reform program that tackles deep-rooted issues,” said Azour. Saudi Arabia’s economy - the largest in the Arab world - was expected to shrink by 5.4 percent this year, according to the IMF. This marks a slight improvemen­t from the sharp 6.8 percent estimated earlier this year as the kingdom reels from the impact of low oil prices and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

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