Riyadh: Saudi Arabian economy is showing deepening signs of strain under the weight of falling prices of crude oil.
Saudi consumers withdrew and spent less money in February, according to central bank data released on Monday. M3, one of the broadest measures of money supply, shrank for the first time since at least 2000, when Bloomberg started tracking the data.
While the kingdom still has one of the world’s largest foreign-currency reserves, cuts in government spending to shore up public finances are taking a toll on the economy. Growth may slow to 1.5 per cent this year, according to the median estimate of a survey, the slowest pace since at least 2009. Saudi officials have repeatedly said that the nation can weather the slump in oil prices.
“The data reflect weaker consumer confidence,” said Simon Kitchen, head of macro-strategy at Cairo-based investment bank EFG-Hermes. “Oil prices remain low, in spite of the February-March recovery, and disposable incomes have been under pressure this year. A recovery in consumer sentiment is unlikely in 2016.”
Cash withdrawals
Cash withdrawals through ATMs fell 8 per cent after expanding for at least the previous five months, central bank data show. Point-of-sale transactions, an indicator of consumer confidence in the economy, dropped 9 per cent from the year-earlier period to 15.2 billion riyals ($4.1 billion). And while bank credit to private businesses expanded about 10 per cent, the growth likely reflects short-term borrowing, according to Monica Malik, the chief economist at Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank.
“The rise in credit doesn’t indicate business expansion,” she said. “Actually, project activity has fallen substantially. All in all, lower government spending is taking a deepening toll on economic growth, and we can see it in the data.”
The government is seeking to plug a budget deficit that reached about 15 per cent of gross domestic product in 2015. Authorities have also raised energy prices.
Brent crude tumbled more than 50 per cent from almost $111 a barrel at the end of 2013 to below $30 in January. They have rebounded since to $40.01 in London on Tuesday.
Malik said the contraction of money supply likely reflects the government’s withdrawal of domestic deposits and the drop in net foreign assets, which declined 38 billion riyals.
The pace of the drop was the slowest since October as Brent crude prices rebounded during the month. Oil exports make up about 70 per cent of the government’s revenue.