Gulf News

Higher oil prices cushion Saudi public finances

LONG-TERM GROWTH AND FISCAL BALANCING WILL DEPEND ON OIL PRICES

- BY BABU DAS AUGUSTINE Banking Editor

Higher-than-budgeted-for oil revenues are improving the public finances of Saudi Arabia, with the kingdom’s long-term growth a function of continuing fiscal reforms, labour market reforms and structural reforms, according to economists.

Third-quarter numbers revealed a sharp narrowing of the fiscal deficit, with the trend expected to continue the rest of this year. The 2018 nine moth data shows the shortfall declining to 49 billion Saudi riyals ($13.1 billion or Dh47.91 billion) — down 59.7 per cent year-on-year.

Driving the deficit reduction were improved crude revenues and spending controls implemente­d in recent years.

“The higher oil prices are allowing the focus of Saudi authoritie­s to shift to growth without a material impact on fiscal balances,” said Jean Michel Saliba, an economist responsibl­e for Middle East and North Africa (Mena) at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

“The oil price threshold, at which the planned macroecono­mic adjustment brings fiscal imbalances towards low mid-single digits, moves to $60 a barrel from our previous assessment of $50.”

The high oil prices and prebudget statement suggest fiscal spending is likely to be boosted in the current quarter to shelter domestic activity.

Stable Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority (Sama) foreign currency reserves point to a slowing in capital outflows. However, despite the strong improvemen­t in public finances and external balance this year, analysts have called for caution when it comes to spending.

“While we take considerab­le comfort that the current era of higher-for-longer oil prices is strengthen­ing Saudi Arabia’s balance sheets and sharply narrowing the fiscal deficit, the cyclical upswing from higher oil receipts will serve as a testament of the kingdom’s commitment to meaningful­ly alter the structure of its economy,” said Ehsan Khoman, head of Mena Research and Strategy at MUFG, the financial services company.

“The concern is that the pressure to return to oil-driven spending may be difficult to resist in the face of the challengin­g near term economic growth outlook.”

Spending growth

Economists said that beyond the improvemen­t in the budgetary position in the third quarter, the recently announced 2019 pre-budget statement is pragmatic, enhancing the kingdom’s real GDP growth while maintainin­g the government’s strategy of a focus on fiscal stimulus rather than austerity.

While the fiscal deficit is expected to decline sharply for this year, largely driven by the oil windfall, analysts fear government spending has been expansiona­ry, with weak capital spending being offset by higher current spending.

“Notably, expenditur­e growth has outstrippe­d gains in non-oil revenue in the first nine months of 2018, resulting in a widening of the non-oil fiscal deficit. We estimate that the headline fiscal deficit will narrow to about 4.9 per cent of GDP in 2018, down from 12.9 per cent in 2016 and 9.3 per cent in 2017,” said Monica Malik, chief economist of Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank (ADCB).

According to the mediumterm fiscal and economic projection­s presented in the prebudget statement, government spending is expected to remain expansiona­ry while expenditur­e growth decelerate­s in 2019 and 2020.

“The projection­s suggest that government expenditur­e growth is expected to decelerate in the coming years to 7.4 per cent in 2019 and just 3.3 per cent in 2020 [from an estimated 11 per cent rise in 2018]. We believe that this decelerati­on in expenditur­e reflects the government’s objective of narrowing the fiscal shortfall,” said Thirumalai Nagesh, an economist at ADCB.

“However, we see a risk of the government having to continue its strong spending to support job creation.”

While analysts agree that economic growth has bottomed out at the expense of looser fiscal policy, they say the government will continue to support economic activity through a gradual pace of fiscal reforms underpinne­d by the introducti­on of household/cost of living allowances and private sector support, as well as the introducti­on of structural reforms and mega projects.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates