The
oil kingdom is facing a big hole in its budget, caused by the slump in oil
prices and a sharp rise in military spending. That's forcing the government to
raid its reserves, and it may even borrow from foreign investors, analysts say.
Saudi
Arabia has already burned through almost $62 billion of its foreign currency
reserves this year, and borrowed $4 billion from local banks in July -- its
first bond issue since 2007.
Its
budget deficit is expected to reach 20% of GDP in 2015. That's extraordinarily
high for a country used to running surpluses. Capital Economics estimates that
government revenues will fall by $82 billion in 2015, equivalent to 8% of GDP.
The IMF is forecasting budget deficits through 2020.
Oil's
slump from $107 a barrel last June to $44 right now is largely responsible for
the squeeze. Half of the country's economic output and 80% of government
revenue is generated by the oil industry.
Yet
Saudi Arabia has only itself to blame. Its aggressive fight to defend OPEC's
share of the global oil market has led to a massive supply glut.
Riyadh
is refusing to cut output, hoping to drive other producers, such as U.S. shale companies, out
of business.
At
the same time, it is ratcheting up spending. It has intervened in a war in
neighboring Yemen, and has been involved in airstrikes against ISIS
in Syria. Its military budget grew by 17% last
year to roughly 10% of GDP.
King Salman also lavished generous bonuses on public sector workers
after his accession to the throne in January. The gesture was popular, but
stretched the kingdom's finances even further.
"We
will see increased borrowing in the coming months," Fahad al-Mubarak, the
governor of the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency, told local media last month.
The
country's central bank would not comment on how many bonds it might issue.
Analysts
suggest the Saudis could issue around $5 billion worth of bonds a month through
the end of this year, some of those to foreign investors.
Still,
it could quickly revert to drawing on reserves, rather than borrowing, if
global interest rates rise.
Its
foreign currency reserves, while depleted, still amounted to $660 billion at
the end of June.
Culled from CNN
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