The National - News

MOODY’S AFFIRMS UAE RATING ON DEPENDABLE RESILIENCE

▶ The country’s Covid-19 response demonstrat­es its strong capability

- SARMAD KHAN

Moody’s Investors Service maintained the UAE’s Aa2 long-term issuer rating, the agency’s third-highest, thanks to the rapid reaction of the country’s institutio­ns in introducin­g measures to counter the Covid-19 pandemic.

The UAE’s fiscal strength remains robust, the ratings agency said as it maintained its stable outlook. “The rating affirmatio­n is supported by the relatively muted impact of the pandemic on the federal government’s fiscal strength, in part the result of an effective government policy response to the pandemic,” Moody’s said.

“World-leading progress on vaccinatio­ns should support the economic recovery, limiting the impact of the pandemic on the UAE’s credit metrics.”

The UAE introduced its mass Covid-19 inoculatio­n programme last year and has so far administer­ed 10.7 million vaccine doses – which represents a rate of 108.99 doses per 100 people, among the fastest in the world.

With aggressive testing and the quick vaccinatio­n drive, the UAE has managed to bring Covid-19 cases down in the second wave, as opposed to parts of Europe, the Americas and India, where infection rates have recently risen.

The UAE’s progress in vaccinatin­g its population could allow for an easing of inbound internatio­nal travel. This would support a “faster-than-expected recovery in the tourism sector, and providing a boost to the hospitalit­y and retail sectors”, Moody’s said.

The UAE was among the first countries in the region to bring in stimulus measures to soften the impact of the pandemic on its economy, support small and medium-sized enterprise­s and protect people’s livelihood­s.

Fiscal and monetary measures remain in place for continued economic recovery. Last month, the UAE Central Bank extended parts of its Targeted Economic Support Scheme – a zero-cost loan initiative aimed at boosting liquidity in the banking system – until the end of June 2022.

Overall, the UAE has unveiled economic support packages worth at least Dh388 billion ($105.6bn) since the onset of the pandemic.

The impact of the federal government’s stimulus measures on its finances was modest, at just over 1 per cent of the country’s gross domestic product. The federal government’s fiscal deficit was only 0.2 per cent of GDP in 2020, which was funded from existing cash balances, the agency said. “The broader policy response to the pandemic has demonstrat­ed the UAE’s capacity to respond to shocks,” Moody’s said.

The agency forecasts that UAE’s nominal GDP will recover to pre-pandemic levels over the next three years. It expects non-oil real GDP to rebound by 3.5 per cent this year, supported by the recovery in global trade and gradual improvemen­ts in the tourism sector.

The Central Bank of the UAE forecasts non-oil economic growth of 3.6 per cent this year and 3.9 per cent in 2022.

Moody’s expects the UAE federal government to begin issuing locally denominate­d debt this year, with the primary purpose of establishi­ng a domestic yield curve.

This is unlikely to significan­tly affect the fiscal strength of the federal government as issuance is likely to be “modest”, adding less than a percentage point to the UAE’s consolidat­ed government debt burden this year, Moody’s said.

Separately, the ratings agency also affirmed Abu Dhabi’s Aa2 long-term issuer sovereign rating with a stable outlook.

Abu Dhabi has “very strong balance sheet and very high per capita income that bolster credit resilience, as well as robust institutio­nal strength evident in the government’s capacity to adjust fiscal policy to respond to shocks”, Moody’s said.

Abu Dhabi’s stable outlook reflects Moody’s expectatio­n that the emirate’s fiscal strength will remain resilient to downside risks to the oil market posed by global pandemic developmen­ts, thanks to “the vast size of Abu Dhabi’s financial buffers”.

A recovery in oil prices this year will help to narrow Abu Dhabi’s fiscal deficit, which the ratings agency forecasts will decline to an average of 3.4 per cent of GDP between 2021 and 2023, almost half the size of last year’s estimated deficit.

The broader policy response to the pandemic has demonstrat­ed the UAE’s capacity to respond to shocks

MOODY’S

Economic report

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates