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Eye of Riyadh
Environment & Energy | Friday 27 February, 2015 2:55 am |
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Bahrain banking on infrastructure, private sector to ride out cheap oil

Bahrain’s economy is holding up in the face of low oil prices as policymakers bank on infrastructure spending and the private sector to offset shrinking energy sector revenues, officials and businessmen said this week.

Bahrain is among the financially weakest of the Gulf oil exporters, lacking the huge hydrocarbon and fiscal reserves of its neighbors.
Because of the plunge of oil prices since last June, Bahrain’s state budget deficit is expected to balloon to 9.3 percent of gross domestic product this year from an estimated 5.0 percent in 2014, according to a Reuters poll of analysts.

So government spending growth is likely to flag, weakening a major support for the economy. But Jarmo Kotilaine, chief economist at the Bahrain Economic Development Board, said construction growth actually accelerated late last year — the sector grew 12.3 percent year-on-year in the third quarter, up from 3.1 percent in the second quarter.
This was because of a pipeline of infrastructure projects, which will have a considerable indirect impact in stimulating other parts of the economy in coming months, Kotilaine said.
“The projects are primarily funded from the GCC Development Fund, private capital, government funds, or FDI (foreign direct investment),” he said. “They are hence not sensitive to oil price variations.”



After the Arab Spring uprisings in 2011, rich nations in the Gulf Cooperation Council set up a $20 billion fund to help Bahrain and Oman maintain social stability through housing and job-creating projects.
Kotilaine, whose public agency is responsible for attracting foreign investment, also said Bahrain had managed to diversify its economy enough in recent years to make lower oil prices less damaging. Oil now represents only about a fifth of Bahrain’s gross domestic product, down from 44 percent in 2000, he said.
“As a result of these factors, we are projecting nonoil growth of around 4.5 percent in 2015 — in line with the estimated nonoil growth of 4.6 percent in 2014 — and we expect this momentum to continue in the medium- to longer term.”

Meanwhile, Bahrain is a mature oil producer so future growth in that sector is likely to be minimal with offshore production at capacity and very gradual gains expected from the kingdom’s onshore field, Kotilaine said.
Overall GDP expanded 5.1 percent from a year earlier in the third quarter of this year, slowing from 5.6 percent in the second quarter, according to the most recent data.

BUDGET

A big question overhanging the economy is what measures Bahrain will take to limit state spending and raise revenues as its budget deficit swells.
On April 1 the government plans to start raising the price of natural gas for industry.
Other economically painful steps are likely to follow, but they are politically sensitive, and would be made more difficult by low-level unrest in Bahrain’s Shiite community that has continued since 2011.
The release of the state budget for 2015 has been delayed by parliamentary elections in late November and it is not clear when the budget will be announced.
A risk for the economy is that dwindling government revenues because of cheap oil could reduce deposits in the banking system, tightening liquidity and hurting bank lending.
Domestic assets of banks in Bahrain shrank 4.0 percent from a year ago in November, the most recent month for which data is available. Lending to the private sector was falling even before oil started dropping; it sank 6.0 percent in November, its seventh fall in a row and the biggest monthly drop so far.
However, Bahrain’s central bank governor Rasheed Al-Maraj suggested the drop was due to loan repayments and said underlying growth in consumer lending and some corporate lending remained strong.

He predicted a pick-up in the coming year.
Mohammed Ali Bucheery, vice president at Tamkeen, a semi-government agency that supports Bahrainis working in the private sector and is funded by fees charged on foreign workers, said there was no sign so far of a significant economic slowdown.
“If there is a long-term effect on the economy by the oil prices, we will see that down the line, where the number of foreign workers drops significantly. We don’t see that happening now.”

Mahmood Al-Kooheji, CEO of Bahrain state fund Mumtalakat, which invests in strategic Bahraini enterprises and manages around $10 billion of assets, said the fund would pursue business projects as usual in 2015 and had no plans to sell off any assets.
Former JP Morgan Chase banker Khaled Amro Al-Rumaihi was appointed CEO of the Economic Development Board this week, replacing transport and telecommunications minister Kamal Ahmed.
Local businessmen said the appointment might aim to reinvigorate the agency’s role in attracting foreign investment.
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