Khaleej Times

Iran sanctions, unrest hit ME growth: IMF

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Dubai — US sanctions on Iran, rising unrest in the Middle East and North Africa (Mena) and oil price volatility are dragging regional economic growth, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Monday.

The IMF warned in a biannual economic outlook report that prospects for the region are “clouded by elevated levels of uncertaint­y”.

“Such uncertaint­y may increase investors’ perception of risk for the whole region, leading to capital outflows and exchange rate pressure,” the global lender said.

The IMF forecasts the economy in Iran, the second largest in the region behind Saudi Arabia, will shrink by 6.0 per cent this year after contractin­g by 3.9 per cent in 2018. The bad news for Tehran comes after the United States reimposed sanctions last year following its withdrawal from a 2015 nuclear accord.

Jihad Azour, IMF director for Middle East and Central Asia, said the dire projection was made before the US tightened up measures targeting Iran’s oil industry last week — meaning the pain could get even worse.

Azour told AFP that sanctions have already pushed inflation in Iran to around 50 per cent.

Iran’s woes have a knock-on effect on regional figures.

Overall regional economic growth was expected to remain subdued at 1.3 per cent this year from 1.4 per cent in 2018.

For oil exporters growth was down at 0.4 per cent for 2019, while importing countries were expected to increase at 3.6 per cent this year, from 4.2 per cent in 2018.

Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) countries were forecast to slightly buck the trend, improving to 2.1 per cent growth from 2.0 in 2018.

The IMF said economic growth in the broader region was negatively impacted by rising conflict, corruption, slow reforms, high levels of debt and continued oil price fluctuatio­ns.

“Social tensions are rising in the context of lower growth and reform fatigue, threatenin­g macroecono­mic stability,” it said.

After the first wave of Arab Spring uprisings in 2011, the region is now witnessing fresh upheaval in Algeria and Sudan and fighting intensifie­d in Libya and Yemen. As a result, reforms in the region have become more urgent to decrease dependence on oil and create millions of jobs, especially for the youth.

“For oil exporters, they are important to be less dependent on the volatility of oil price and for diversifyi­ng their economies,” Azour said. He said reforms are also vital for oil importers to face a rising level of debt which has reached over 80 per cent of GDP on average.

The region, in addition to Pakistan and Afghanista­n, needs to create some 25 million jobs over the next five years to maintain current unemployme­nt rates, he said.

For the GCC countries that figure stands at five million.

For oil exporters, they are important to be less dependent on the volatility of oil price and for diversifyi­ng their economies

Jihad Azour, IMF director for Middle East and Central Asia

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 ??  ?? Jihad Azour, IMF director for Middle East and Central Asia, said reforms are also vital for oil importers to face a rising level of debt which has reached over 80 per cent of GDP. — Supplied photo
Jihad Azour, IMF director for Middle East and Central Asia, said reforms are also vital for oil importers to face a rising level of debt which has reached over 80 per cent of GDP. — Supplied photo

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