S&P: GCC remains resilient

Author: 
Mahmood Rafique | Arab News
Publication Date: 
Thu, 2009-05-07 03:00

MANAMA: In the wake of huge economic losses due to the economic meltdown, Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi and Kuwait have the greatest amount of fiscal space to pursue counter-cyclical expansionary policies and could sustain a 10 percent deficit without resorting to debt finance for at least 25 years, according to Standard and Poor’s report.

The report released yesterday said that despite losses, GCC Government assets remain a valuable buffer against the global downturn.

“The credit crunch has hit the liabilities side of Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries’ balance sheets and the fall in global asset valuations, including in domestic GCC capital and real estate markets, has had a significant and detrimental effect on the value of their assets, resulting in lower net asset positions and higher contingent liabilities for GCC sovereigns,” the report added.

“Furthermore, a combination of low oil prices and a decline in oil production is likely to have a significant impact on government revenues across the GCC.”

However, according to a new Standard & Poor’s report published yesterday, GCC countries are well placed to shield their economies from the turbulence, thanks primarily to their exceptional capacity to pursue counter-cyclical expansionary fiscal policy.

“Unlike in previous oil price cycles in the 1970s and 1980s when a sharp decline in oil prices was met with a sharp decline in government expenditure, GCC policy makers have today by and large chosen to smooth government expenditure, which is a critical driver of the non-oil economy. Saudi Arabia, for example, has opted to increase government expenditure by 16 percent, focusing on infrastructure spending, which will rise in 2009 by some 36 percent, the largest ever increase in infrastructure spending in that country,” it added.

“Similarly aggressive expansionary policies with a focus on infrastructure are evident in Abu Dhabi, Qatar, and Oman.”

“We believe that GCC governments have exceptional fiscal space to implement their counter-cyclical expansionary policies, despite experiencing significant losses on their foreign asset holdings over the past 18 months,” it added. “In our view, Saudi Arabia, Abu Dhabi, and Kuwait have the greatest amount of fiscal space to pursue such policies, and we forecast that each could sustain a 10 percent deficit without resorting to debt finance for at least 25 years,” it added.

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