LOOKING GOOD: Gulf Arab 2012 growth outlooks improve

The immediate economic outlook for most of the Gulf's wealthy Arab oil exporters has improved in the last several months despite a sharp drop in global oil prices over the period.
July 10, 2012 4:55 by Reuters
The latest Reuters poll of 17 analysts, conducted this month, found them raising their 2012 gross domestic product growth forecasts for three o f the six m e mbers of the Gulf Cooperation Council.
Saudi Arabia, the biggest Arab economy and the world’s top oil exporter, is now expected to expand at a median rate of 5.2 percent this year, instead of the 4.5 percent forecast in the March poll. Last year, the Saudi economy grew 6.8 percent.
In the United Arab Emirates, GDP growth is now forecast to slow to 3.2 percent this year from 4.2 percent in 2011. The latest forecast is slightly more optimistic than 3.1 percent predicted in the March poll.
Qatar remained the top projected 2012 performer with a 6.3 percent growth forecast, although that was down from the March poll’s prediction of 6.6 percent.
“Downside risks exist from Europe and the world economy. But this aside, growth in the GCC should hold up reasonably well,” said Daniel Kaye, senior economist at National Bank of Kuwait.
“Despite the recent fall in oil prices, fiscal and external balances will remain very solid.”
For most Gulf economies, however, forecasts for growth in 2013 fell from the last poll in March. Saudi Arabia’s outlook for next year was cut to 4.0 percent from 4.3 percent, while the UAE was lowered to 3.4 percent from 3.6 percent.
BUDGET SURPLUSES
Oil and gas revenue provides most of the budget income of Gulf states, which boosted spending on pensions and wages last year to ease social tensions such as those that simmer in Bahrain. Nevertheless, most countries are expected to enjoy large fiscal surpluses this year and next, the poll showed.
Saudi Arabia is expected to book a surplus of 13.2 percent of GDP in 2012, up from 12.4 percent predicted in March’s poll, with the UAE unchanged at 5.9 percent.
“We expect Saudi oil production to increase a little bit this year and we think the government spending will be trimmed a little bit by around 5 percent, but that really reflects last year’s outsized spending,” said James Reeve, senior economist at Samba Financial Group in London.
“In the short term, they can easily cope with significantly lower oil prices as they did in 2009. But they need to get a handle on domestic oil consumption in the medium- to long term.”
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