UAE Posts $11bn Fiscal Surplus
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UAE Posts $11bn Fiscal Surplus

UAE Posts $11bn Fiscal Surplus

The UAE’s revenues rose 41 per cent to Dhs440.1 billion in 2011, mainly due to high oil prices, said IMF.

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The United Arab Emirates’ public finances swung into a surplus of 2.9 per cent of economic output in 2011 after two years of deficits as robust oil income offset an increase in government spending, a report by the International Monetary Fund showed.

The world’s number three oil exporter booked a consolidated fiscal surplus of Dhs38.6 billion ($10.5 billion) compared with a deficit of Dhs 23 billion, or 2.1 per cent of gross domestic product, in 2010, according to Reuters calculations based on IMF estimates and government data.

However, the 2011 surplus was only a fraction of fiscal surpluses enjoyed before the global financial crisis. They averaged Dhs167 billion annually in 2006-2008.

The data consolidate the accounts of the federal government with those of Abu Dhabi and Dubai, the two largest emirates in the seven-member UAE, as well as Sharjah.

The government has not yet released consolidated figures for 2011. Abu Dhabi, which accounts for around 78 per cent of overall spending in the UAE, does not publish its yearly budget plans and outcomes.

Government spending in the UAE, the second largest Arab economy, surged over 19 per cent to an estimated all-time high of Dhs401.5 billion in 2011, according to the IMF. That was nearly 56 per cent above the 2008 level.

Consolidated revenue is estimated to have soared 41 per cent to Dhs440.1 billion, a three-year high, with hydrocarbon income accounting for over 82 per cent, showed the report, which the IMF released after consultations with UAE authorities.

Unlike other countries in the Middle East, the UAE has not been hit by the wave of social unrest which started last year, but it has raised public spending to avert tensions. It has a cradle-to-grave welfare system and its per capita income of $48,200 is one of the highest in the world.

The UAE’s spending on economic development rose five per cent to Dhs37.3 billion in 2011, while spending on subsidies and transfers jumped over 31 per cent to an estimated Dhs53.9 billion.

CRUDE INCOME

The country’s dependence on income from hydrocarbons has risen considerably since 2008. The IMF has estimated the oil price which the UAE needs to balance its budget jumped to $84 per barrel this year from $23 in 2008.

A Reuters poll of analysts in March forecast the UAE would post a consolidated budget surplus of 5.9 per cent of GDP in 2012. But a recent fall of the oil price could prevent that estimate from being reached; Brent crude is now around $99, having dropped from above $125 early this year.

In Abu Dhabi alone, the budget is estimated to have remained in deficit for the third year in a row. However, the gap halved from the previous year to Dhs33.8 billion in 2011, the IMF report showed.

Abu Dhabi’s expenditures grew 21 per cent to an estimated Dhs314.7 billion last year, while income shot up 46 per cent to Dhs280.9 billion. Abu Dhabi, which bailed out Dubai during the 2009 Dubai corporate debt crisis, included a Dhs9.9 billion transfer to Dubai in its 2011 budget, the IMF estimated.

Dubai’s own budget deficit is estimated to have widened to Dhs17.3 billion in 2011 from 12.7 billion in 2010. The IMF’s data for Dubai differ from official figures because the IMF consolidates the central budget with the Dubai Financial Support Fund (DFSF) and includes transfers from Abu Dhabi.

Expenditures of the DFSF, which was set up to help troubled state entities in Dubai, rose to Dhs19.2 billion in 2011, the IMF estimated, from 14.7 billion in 2010. That would bring its overall expenditure to Dhs82.8 billion since 2009.


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