Business Day

Jordan PM reshuffles cabinet

- Suleiman Al-Khalidi Amman

Prime Minister Bisher al-Khasawneh reshuffled his cabinet on Sunday in a move meant to accelerate IMF-guided reforms seen as crucial to Jordan’s economic recovery from the blow of the coronaviru­s pandemic, officials said.

Six new ministers were named including interior and justice after Khasawneh fired both incumbents last week for attending a restaurant dinner party that violated coronaviru­s restrictio­ns they were supposed to enforce.

In the new 28-member cabinet, Brig-Gen Mazen Araya, who headed the Covid-19 crisis centre, was appointed interior minister in a shake-up seen as giving Khasawneh more scope to tackle social and economic problems, government officials said.

The British-educated Khasawneh, a veteran former diplomat and palace aide, was appointed last October by King Abdullah to restore public trust over the handling of the coronaviru­s health crisis and defuse anger over successive government­s’ failure to deliver on pledges of prosperity and curbing corruption.

Jordan is witnessing a nearly two-month-old surge of infections driven by a more contagious variant of the virus amid rising discontent over worsening economic conditions and curbs on public freedoms under emergency laws.

Aides say Khasawneh was expected to retain Harvardedu­cated Mohamad Al Ississ as finance minister.

He has won IMF praise for his handling of the economy during the pandemic, and has negotiated a four-year IMF programme worth $1.3bn, signalling confidence in Jordan’s reform agenda.

The expected reshuffle comes after parliament last week passed a 9.9-billion dinar ($14bn) budget which Al Ississ said aimed to maintain fiscal prudence to help ensure financial stability and rein in a record $45bn public debt.

The economy saw its worst contractio­n — 3% — in decades in 2020, hit by lockdowns, border closures and a sharp fall in tourism during the pandemic, but the government and the IMF both predict a bounce of similar magnitude this year.

Officials say Jordan’s commitment to IMF reforms and investor confidence in the improved outlook helped the country maintain stable sovereign ratings at a time when other emerging markets were being downgraded.

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