| ECONOMIC SPOTLIGHT - KUWAITI ECONOMY |
| Kuwait's oil-reliant and debt-ridden |
| economy has started to pull out of a nosedive but oil prices |
| will determine the pace of recovery, bankers and economists |
| say. |
| Crucial will be the ability of the 13-member OPEC to hold |
| oil prices around a new benchmark of 18 dlrs a barrel in the |
| northern hemisphere summer when demand usually slackens. |
| Bankers estimate the economy, measured in terms of gross |
| domestic product (gdp), shrank 19 pct in real terms last year |
| after contracting 8.1 pct the year before. |
| This was after taking into account inflation in consumer |
| prices of 1.5 pct in 1985, slowing to 1.0 pct in 1986. |
| Factors depressing economic activity include the |
| 6-1/2-year-old Iran-Iraq war on Kuwait's doorstep, which |
| threatens the emirate's vital oil export lifeline through the |
| Gulf and has sapped business confidence. |
| But sentiment received a much-needed boost in September |
| when, after a series of piecemeal steps to combat a debt crisis |
| caused by the 1982 crash of local stock market, a comprehensive |
| new debt settlement program was introduced. |
| The share crash, result of a speculative spree in forward |
| trading, left 95 billion dlrs of post-dated cheques in default. |
| The cheques were also used as collateral for consumer |
| spending, thus generating an informal credit system. |
| Much of the debt has been watered down but big sums are |
| still owed by individuals and companies. |
| There was some 4.4 billion dinars (about 15.7 billion dlrs) |
| in outstanding bank credit at the end of 1986, of which |
| one-quarter to one-third was estimated by bankers to rank as |
| bad or doubtful debt. But the government has repeatedly said it |
| will not allow any banks to go under. |
| The new debt settlement scheme entails a rescheduling of |
| problem credit over 10 to 15 years, depending on whether |
| debtors have regular cash flows or not. |
| Banks' shareholders and depositors will have their rights |
| guaranteed by the government |
| in a country of only 1.7 mln people where the financial sector |
| is the biggest after oil. |
| Kuwait is better placed than any other OPEC country to ride |
| out the oil glut, bankers and economists say. |
| Kuwait has an OPEC quota of 948,000 barrels per day (bpd) |
| compared with production capacity of 4.0 mln bpd mentioned last |
| year by Oil Minister Sheikh Ali al-Khalifa al-Sabah. |
| But strategic diversification into downstream operations in |
| Europe several years ago and a hefty refining investment at |
| home gives it guaranteed markets abroad and enables it to sell |
| over one-half of its output as high-grade refined oil products. |
| Oil industry sources say Kuwait is able to get an average |
| 2.00 dlrs a barrel more by selling oil in the form of processed |
| product such as gas oil, kerosene and naphtha, rather than as |
| crude. |
| Bankers say the rebound in oil prices is the major reason |
| for cautious optimism. Other reasons are low domestic |
| inflation, a bottoming out of the fall in imports in recent |
| years and signs government spending on productive sectors will |
| remain steady. |
| External accounts are in good shape, with an estimated 1.8 |
| billion dinar current account surplus in 1986, 16 pct below |
| that for 1985, but still an achievement in the recession-hit |
| Gulf. |
| Kuwait's petrodollar reserves in mid-1986 were put |
| officially at over 80 billion dlrs, earning investment income |
| of the equivalent of about 3.65 billion dlrs a year. |
| But for the first time since the end of the oil boom, these |
| reserves may not be enough to prevent a "real" budget deficit for |
| the 1986/87 fiscal year ending June 30, bankers say. |
| In a budget portrayed by bankers as mildly contractionary, |
| revenues for 1986/87 were cut 38.6 pct and spending 11 pct, |
| doubling the nominal deficit to 1.33 billion dinars. |
| This left out income from state reserves, usually excluded |
| in official budget accounting, which are forecast by bankers at |
| up to 1.0 billion dinars in 1986/87, resulting in some |
| shortfall. |
| Bankers say it is too early to venture a forecast for |
| economic growth this year or next. |
| "It depends on oil prices," one said. "This summer is |
| important." |
| Cabinet Affairs Minister Rashid al-Rashid said last Sunday |
| the cabinet has ratified recommendations to rationalise state |
| spending in favour of productive sectors and reactivate the |
| economy. |
| He gave no details but bankers say these are expected to be |
| spelled out in the 1987/88 budget, possibly in June. |
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