MENA GDP to rebound by 2.2% in 2021 due to oil recovery: World Bank

This puts regional growth estimates at 6.4 percent lower than the pre-pandemic growth forecast published in October 2019

By: Business Today Egypt

Sun, Apr. 4, 2021

The Middle East and North Africa region’s countries look to be slowly rebounding, with the World Bank recently reporting a forecast of a rebound of by 2.2 percent in 2021, after 2020’s contraction of 3.8 percent.

The recent outlook, published in “Living With Debt: How Institutions can Chart a Path to Recovery for the Middle East and North Africa,” noted that the new forecast is 0.3 percent higher than expected in October 2020.

This puts regional growth estimates at 6.4 percent lower than the pre-pandemic growth forecast published in October 2019, according to the World Bank.

The expected rebound in 2021 comes on the back of a faster than expected recovery in oil prices, stated the report.

However, the positive outlook is unlikely to bring the region back to 2019’s economic activity levels, and certainly not at the level that was previously expected pre-pandemic.

“By 2021, the regional economy is forecast to be 7.2 percent below the no-pandemic counterfactual GDP level, equivalent to $227 billion. GDP per capita is arguably a more precise statistic of the region’s standard of living than GDP. The region’s average real GDP per capita is estimated to decline 5.3 percent in 2020. The region’s average real GDP per capita is forecast to increase by a meagre 0.6 percent in 2021. All in all, the region’s real GDP per capita in 2021 would be 4.7 percent below the level in 2019,” the report said.

Egypt and other developing oil importer countries are expected to be 9.3 percent below the counterfactual GDP level without the pandemic, according to the report.

The report said that declining government revenues combined with the need to back vulnerable families and other policy responses to the Covid-19 pandemic led to increases in public debt across the region.

The report also said that MENA entered the Covid-19 crisis with chronic low growth, macroeconomic imbalances, and weak governance, especially when it comes to transparency, adding that the pandemic has placed significant pressure on governments' fiscal positions.

Average fiscal deficit for the region in 2020 is estimated to be accelerated to 9.4 percent of GDP, up from pre-pandemic forecast deficit of 4.6 percent.

The pandemic is estimated to increase the region’s public debt to about 54 percent of GDP in 2020, due to MENA countries having borrowed to finance deficits, accelerating the rise in public debt during the past decade.

The debt of oil-importing developing countries is expected to reach 93 percent.

“Having entered the crisis with chronic low growth, high debt and poor governance, the region’s developing economies are facing difficult tradeoffs associated with the accumulation of debt. Institutional reforms and transparency can help chart a solid path to recovery,” stated the report.

It added that the sovereign credit default swaps (CDS) of Egypt, Tunisia and Iraq rose the most, more than CDS increases of GCC countries. As of early March 2021, CDS levels have returned to pre-pandemic levels, with some exceptions.

Based on the region’s baseline growth forecasts, the report expected the number of poor people in the region — who make less than the $5.50 per day poverty line — to jump to 192 million people by the end of 2021, up from 176 million in 2019.