The National - News

Moody’s cuts Oman sovereign rating

- SARMAD KHAN

Moody’s Investors Service downgraded the long-term issuer and senior unsecured bond ratings of the Oman government by a notch to Baa3, citing larger fiscal deficits and the ongoing weakening of its economy on the back of subdued growth in the coming years.

“The key driver of the downgrade is Moody’s expectatio­n that Oman’s fiscal and external metrics will continue to weaken, in part reflecting institutio­nal and policy constraint­s,” Moody’s said in a statement yesterday. “In the absence of significan­t measures to narrow the fiscal and current account deficits beyond the current plans, Oman’s capacity to absorb potential shocks would erode further.” Moody’s forecasts Oman’s fiscal deficit will remain at 5 per cent to 7 per cent of GDP in the next five years. The agency projects the government’s debt burden will exceed 50 per cent of GDP by 2019 and rise above 60 per cent by 2021, up from 40.5 per cent at end-2017.

The affordabil­ity of government debt will also weaken, with interest payments absorbing 8.4 per cent of government revenues by 2019, compared with around 3.8 per cent in 2017.

The Omani government, which sold $5 billion worth of bonds 12 months ago, tapped the debt markets again in January via a $6.5bn bond, its largest ever. Oman, the biggest Middle Eastern oil producer outside Opec, is trying to diversify its economy and cut its dependence on oil revenues. However, the Arabian Gulf state doesn’t have access to the large cash buffers enjoyed by some of its GCC peers, and therefore has to rely more heavily on capital markets to plug fiscal deficits.

The government earlier this year said it plans to finance 84 per cent of its 2018 fiscal deficit – or 2.5bn Omani rials ($6.5bn) – via domestic and foreign borrowings, with the remaining 500m rial deficit being serviced via drawdowns of reserves.

Oil proceeds make up about 70 per cent of Oman’s revenue.

The decline in oil prices has forced Muscat to cut spending and privatise some state assets. The government, which announced an expansiona­ry budget earlier this year, plans to sell stakes in the at least six state-owned entities to raise additional finances. But planned expenditur­e cuts and additional revenue-raising measures will only narrow the deficit to a limited extent, according to Moody’s.

Oman’s large public sector wage bill – which accounts for 12 per cent of GDP and 27 per cent of total expenditur­e – together with increases in social spending over the past seven years pose significan­t policy hurdles to faster fiscal consolidat­ion.

“While the government aims to keep the civil servants’ wages and benefits bill broadly unchanged in nominal terms over the next few years, Moody’s does not foresee a significan­t nominal reduction of non-interest government spending over the medium term,” the agency said.

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