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Gulf's financial wealth could be over in 15 years: IMF

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Gulf's financial wealth could be over in 15 years: IMF


DUBAI (Reuters) - The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Thursday Gulf Arab states — some of the world’s richest countries — could see their financial wealth depleted in the next 15 years amid lower hydrocarbon revenues if they don’t step up fiscal reforms.


The six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) - whose net financial wealth the IMF estimates at $2 trillion - accounts for over one fifth of global oil supply, but economies in the region have been hit hard by a drop in oil prices in 2014 and 2015.

While lower crude prices have put pressure on governments to generate non-oil revenues and fix their finances, “the effect of lower hydrocarbon revenue is yet to be fully offset,” the IMF said in a report.

“At the current fiscal stance, the region’s existing financial wealth could be depleted in the next 15 years,” it said.

The Washington-based international crisis lender said global oil demand could peak by around 2040 or much sooner in case of a stronger regulatory push for environmental protection and energy efficiency.

“All GCC countries have recognized the lasting nature of their challenge ... However, the expected speed and size of these consolidations in most countries may not be sufficient to stabilize their wealth.”


Gulf states have for decades used their energy wealth to provide millions of citizens with government jobs, part of a social contract by rulers that rewards political acquiescence and educational attainment with employment for life.

But high-paying public sector jobs that demand little of workers have translated into low productivity and an entitlement culture, as well as rising costs as populations grow.

Budgets are stretched further by hefty state spending on subsidies, social services and generous state pensions.

GCC governments have only gradually introduced austerity measures to avoid social discontent, such as the introduction of a value added tax (VAT) in some GCC countries. But most continue to struggle to balance fiscal consolidation and growth.

The IMF said the introduction of VAT and excise taxes was positive: “There is significant potential to build on this progress.”

“As the region transitions toward a non-hydrocarbon economy, moving from wide-ranging fees toward fewer broad-based taxes, for example, could provide much-needed revenue diversification.”


Kuwait - which has one of the world’s biggest sovereign funds - could need some $180 billion in financing over the next six years in the absence of more drastic fiscal measures, the IMF said last month.

Saudi Arabia, the Arab world’s largest economy and the world’s largest crude exporter, expects a deficit of $50 billion this year, up from $35 billion in 2019.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...h-could-be-over-in-15-years-imf-idUSKBN2002HZ

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I have been hearing about this for years but nothing seems to have changed yet. I hope this happens in my lifetime so I can see the badmaashi of these useless impotent Sheikhs, who have otherwise no ability whatsoever, come to an end.
 
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Dubai is Losing Over 30,000 Jobs a Month: Report
Posted 13 hours ago by Raza Rizvi
Emirates_UAE_Dubai_10.jpg

  • Emirates NBD, the city’s biggest bank, Dubai-Islamic Bank, Dubai World, and HSBC have slashed thousands of jobs in recent months.



    Note that these entities made headlines because they were too larger companies to ignore. There is no official number of job cuts in SMEs operating there. Based on a conservative estimate, the recent wave of layoffs may have left nearly one hundred thousand people unemployed in Dubai.

    According to IHS Markit, Dubai’s Purchasing Managers’ Index slipped to 50.6, almost touching the threshold that separates growth from contraction. It said that the wholesale, retail, as well as construction sectors, have dropped beneath the no-change mark.
    Employment in Dubai was notably affected, with companies reporting the joint-quickest fall in job numbers seen throughout the 10-year series history.

    The dim outlook is not limited to Dubai as the business environment in the entire country is under pressure. However, experts are hoping that the situation will improve in the coming months.

    The only positive for Dubai was its travel and tourism industry that showed a “modest improvement” last month, mainly due to the New Year’s celebrations.

    However, with a viral outbreak in China, the tourism sector has also faced a dip in the first week of February. Its revival is crucial for the success of the World Expo exhibition, scheduled for October this year.


    Raza Rizvi



 
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Middle East Gulf GCC countries running out of money and going back to their camel jockey days will be good for:
1. World Peace ... No more ISIS
2. Pakistan... No more wahabbi terror schools and no more Indian support and no more economical Blackmailing Pakistan.
3. Climate change.... Less dependency on diesel fuels
4. Reduced Arab Gulf arrogance... They can return back to their humble beginnings...
5. Palestinians... These Gulf Arabs have sold them out
 
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i have been hearing this damn news forever, the GCC is running out of oil, the dubai is running out of oil , the KSA is running out of oil ..
can someone tell us the actual date and year ..

Middle East Gulf GCC countries running out of money and going back to their camel jockey days will be good for:
1. World Peace ... No more ISIS
2. Pakistan... No more wahabbi terror schools and no more Indian support and no more economical Blackmailing Pakistan.
3. Climate change.... Less dependency on diesel fuels
4. Reduced Arab Gulf arrogance... They can return back to their humble beginnings...
5. Palestinians... These Gulf Arabs have sold them out

i agreed,
but will it happen or not ?
 
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i have been hearing this damn news forever, the GCC is running out of oil, the dubai is running out of oil , the KSA is running out of oil ..
can someone tell us the actual date and year ..



i agreed,
but will it happen or not ?

Not running out of oil.... The world is awash in oil. The demand is dropping...


Comprehensive Crises Facing UAE’s Economy, Amid Expectations Of The Worst Yet To Come
Last updated Feb 12, 2020
The overall crises that the UAE economy that has been going for years are escalating amid expectations of the worst in light of the state’s involvement in wars and external interference that negatively affected the state.

The specialized reports confirm that the economic crisis in the UAE is exacerbating and escalating on a record basis, warning against reaching the point of the explosion, and among its evidence is that the number of employees and banks operating in the country has decreased.

The banking sector has had a lot of expansion, profitable activities and deals over many years in the Emirates, but this sector continues to decline.

A few days ago, a report of Reuters International revealed that Dubai Islamic Bank is preparing to dispense about half of the workforce in one of its linked banks, through a layoff plan, due to financial pressures.

This will be done by laying off about 500 employees of “Noor Bank”, which it recently acquired, as part of plans to reduce costs at both banks, the agency said.

A unit of the International Standard Chartered Bank cut more than 100 jobs in the retail activities sector in the UAE last August, at a time when official data show that the banking sector and many activities are exposed to many pressures.

The credit rating agency, Fitch, affirms that Emirati banks have not fully recovered from the real estate crisis that struck Dubai in 2010, stating that “bank loans in the second and third stage (which have been restructured) are already high, with an average of between 15 and 20% of the total Loans are likely to increase.”

In the meantime, the real estate market in the Emirates continues to decline after this sector was among the largest sectors attracting investors and international capital.

The real estate market in Dubai has been witnessing a steady contraction, since mid-2014, due to the lack of demand from foreign investors, and the overall market has fallen by at least a quarter, according to specialized reports.

Recently, CNBC Arabia quoted Hussein Damac, Chairman of Damac, one of the largest real estate companies in the Middle East, as saying that prices reached the bottom in 2019, and the offer in Dubai is what drove the real estate market to decline.

He added: The company “was expecting a supply glut, which appeared clearly in the company’s data in 2018, which prompted the company to launch one project in 2018 and 2019.”

He pointed out that DAMAC “reduced projects in 2018 and 2019 by 90%.”

And last summer, Savills Real Estate Consulting said that the prices of luxury residential properties in Dubai fell 1.9% in the first half of the year, due to excess supply.

Savills said that the prices of the luxury real estate market have decreased 19.8% over the past five years, to reach $600 per square foot, “due to the high levels of new construction stocks and the global economic uncertainty.”

Meanwhile, the losses of the aviation sector in the Emirates are prominent, as Dubai International Airport, which is the center of Emirates Airlines operations, has been transformed within a few years, from just an airstrip on the banks of the Arabian Gulf, to the most important air center in the Middle East and one of the ten best Airports in the world and the fastest growing.

Dubai Airport has attracted more than 115 airlines covering more than 135 destinations around the world, and its capacity is about 90 million passengers annually, and it has become one of the most airports in the world receiving international travelers.

However, Dubai Airport witnessed a decrease in passenger numbers during the past year, by 3.1% from the previous year, to record the first annual decline in travel traffic.

The Reuters news agency quoted airport CEO Paul Griffiths a few days ago as saying that the factors that led to the retreat include the temporary closure of the landing strip, the collapse of the Indian Jet Airways, and the prevention of Boeing 737 MAX planes from flying globally.

He added that the airport lost about 3.2 million potential passengers, as a result.

Dubai is a popular destination for Indian airlines such as Jet, and flydubai, the airport-based company, is a major customer of the Max plane.

Also, passenger traffic was disappointing in 2018, as it was expected to return to record double-digit growth, but recorded growth of only one percent, which is the slowest pace in 15 years

Aircraft landings and takeoffs fell 8.6% to 373,261 in 2019.

Travel traffic is likely to be affected in the first quarter of the year by the outbreak of the Corona virus in China, which has led to travel restrictions and the suspension of flights to and from the world’s second largest economy.

Etihad Airways, the national carrier of the Emirates, announced five days ago that it would sell 38 aircraft, including 22 Airbus A330 and 16 Boeing 777-300ER aircraft, in a deal with KKR. “Investment and Altavier Air Finance.

“The deal provides us with flexibility, while ensuring our commitment to our sustainability goals and maintaining a fleet of the most fuel-efficient and technologically advanced aircraft,” the company said in a statement.

Etihad Airways has suffered annual losses for nearly four years, with an annual loss of more than $1 billion.

These losses led her to search for ways to reduce its expenses, including the expected layoffs of pilots early this year.

And last year, the company said that its total revenue last year, decreased by 2.4%, to $5.86 billion, down from $6 billion a year earlier.

In a statement, it stated that in 2018 it had stopped a number of flights to cities such as: Tehran, Jaipur (India), Entebbe (Uganda), Dallas, Fort Worth, Dhaka, Dar es Salaam and Edinburgh.

The company incurred losses of $1.87 billion in 2016, due to the decline in the value of its assets and the weak returns on its investments in “Alitalia” and “Air Berlin”.
 
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gcc has failed to diversify economy,they are only depending on oil and have not developed industry based on technological items so in future they will face decline in economy and also they are facing security threats from israel and proxies of western world
 
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The business model the emirates was pushing was just not realistic. You cannot have a “shining oasis in the desert” in a volatile neighborhood and market without offering anything other than a plastic city built on consumerism. Trying to build a Vegas out of Dubai cannot work without the prerequisite demand within the region for it and housing to cater to the visiting classes.
There was no security provided to non-citizens and the elite class of locals that emerged provides no-confidence to investors looking for longer term returns.

Moreover, at the end of the day the oil returns are more entrenched and provide a greater consumer base versus the plastic luxury of Dubai. The true alternative was to become a trade hub but that did not pan out due to the volatile region and the creation of alternative hubs.

There is reason why Dubai(among others) makes active attempts to sabotage Gwadar. It provides a key access to Chinese and central asian trading which could disrupt the “one hub” idea of Dubai.

And Dubai is the successful GCC state, compare that to Saudi Arabia which has only just woken up to this reality or Qatar.

One wonders the impact a non-rogue Iran would have to the region’s economics. It is the ideal economic hub for activities and its rise could put GCC activities in jeopardy
 
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The business model the emirates was pushing was just not realistic. You cannot have a “shining oasis in the desert” in a volatile neighborhood and market without offering anything other than a plastic city built on consumerism. Trying to build a Vegas out of Dubai cannot work without the prerequisite demand within the region for it and housing to cater to the visiting classes.
There was no security provided to non-citizens and the elite class of locals that emerged provides no-confidence to investors looking for longer term returns.

Moreover, at the end of the day the oil returns are more entrenched and provide a greater consumer base versus the plastic luxury of Dubai. The true alternative was to become a trade hub but that did not pan out due to the volatile region and the creation of alternative hubs.

There is reason why Dubai(among others) makes active attempts to sabotage Gwadar. It provides a key access to Chinese and central asian trading which could disrupt the “one hub” idea of Dubai.

And Dubai is the successful GCC state, compare that to Saudi Arabia which has only just woken up to this reality or Qatar.

One wonders the impact a non-rogue Iran would have to the region’s economics. It is the ideal economic hub for activities and its rise could put GCC activities in jeopardy
Posts like this are why posters like you are called "advisors".
 
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Middle East Gulf GCC countries running out of money and going back to their camel jockey days will be good for:
1. World Peace ... No more ISIS
2. Pakistan... No more wahabbi terror schools and no more Indian support and no more economical Blackmailing Pakistan.
3. Climate change.... Less dependency on diesel fuels
4. Reduced Arab Gulf arrogance... They can return back to their humble beginnings...
5. Palestinians... These Gulf Arabs have sold them out

You hit the mark on all points.

What the Gulf enjoyed is Allahs blessings and Rahmat and sadly they squandered it on useless investments and worldly objects that they will leave behind. Spending $500,000,000 on a useless Jesus picture, $300,000,000 castle in France etc. to name a few, eventuality this was bound to happen.

Right now they are in a rat race to Invest their wealth funds but all they are doing is putting money outside the country and into stock markets. Their selling off their oil assets to make ends meet. This doesn’t result in internal development at all. I laugh at Philip the Arab and others post GCC Weapons Programs and stuff I mean your so behind who’s to even bother buying from them when West has developed Economies of scale and higher rate of production.

They think oil will be a sought after commodity but you have US, Canada and other West nations becoming self sufficient. This doesn’t include investments in alternative energy. On top of the telecommute workers on the rise and the need for office real estate is down in the states as well, which would mean less need of oil and cars etc.

A sad fate.
 
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Global warming and advancement in renewable energy is putting pressure on oil industry.

BP new CEO also stated that in Next few decades BP will move away from oil and into other zero emission energy. Which clearly indicates either countries are running out of cheap oil or with new regulations and cost of deep sea drilling isn’t worth the effort anymore.
 
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Global warming and advancement in renewable energy is putting pressure on oil industry.

BP new CEO also stated that in Next few decades BP will move away from oil and into other zero emission energy. Which clearly indicates either countries are running out of cheap oil or with new regulations and cost of deep sea drilling isn’t worth the effort anymore.

It’s a multitude of factors tech advancement has allowed people to work from home or hire overseas for remote working. Smarter cars and eco friendly technology allows us to do more for the same. With mass production it makes it cheaper.
 
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