Posted on February 10, 2019
Chennai: Public debt
has rapidly increased in many Arab countries since the 2008 global financial
crisis, due to persistently high budget deficits, the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) warned on Saturday.
“Unfortunately, the
region has yet to fully recover from the global financial crisis and other big
economic dislocations over the past decade,” managing director, IMF, Christine
Lagarde said.
“Among oil importers,
(economic) growth has picked up, but it is still below pre-crisis levels,” she
said.
Lagarde stated that
public debt among Arab oil importing nations had increased from 64 per cent to
85 per cent of GDP in the decade. Nearly half of these countries now have
public debt of over 90 per cent of GDP, she said.
Public debt among oil
exporters — including the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council — rose from 13
per cent of GDP to 33 per cent of GDP, accelerated by the crash in oil prices
around five years ago, Lagarde said.
“The oil exporters have
not fully recovered from the dramatic oil price shock of 2014,” she said and
added that modest growth continues, but the outlook is highly uncertain.
Lagarde said oil
producing countries should look to renewable energy in the coming decades, in
line with the Paris Agreement on climate change, which stipulates a reduction
in greenhouse emissions.
The IMF last month
lowered its economic growth forecasts for Saudi Arabia — the world’s top crude
exporter — and the wider Middle East and North Africa region due to a renewed
fall in oil prices, low output and geopolitical tensions.
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