KUWAIT: The Cabinet approved its budget for the 2018-2019 fiscal year, projecting a huge deficit for the fourth year in a row because of low oil prices. Next year's deficit is estimated at KD 6.5 billion ($21.6 billion), after a mandatory transfer of allocations to the Future Generations Fund. Finance Minister Nayef Al-Hajraf told a press conference the government will withdraw from the state reserve fund and borrow on the domestic and international debt markets to finance the shortfall.
After posting healthy surpluses for 16 successive years, Kuwait has posted a budget deficit in each of the past three years after oil prices began to slide in mid-2014. Hajraf said the new budget projects revenues at KD 15 billion ($50 billion), up 12 percent on last year's estimates after the oil price rose from $45 to $50 a barrel. Oil income is estimated at KD 13.3 billion ($44.3 billion) on a daily production of 2.8 million barrels. Spending is projected at KD 20 billion ($66.7 billion), marginally higher than last year, the minister said.
He said government wages and subsidies account for 73 percent of the budget which takes effect on April 1. It still has to be passed by the National Assembly. Just 18 percent of spending will go on development projects, Hajraf said. He said Kuwait will not impose value-added tax or other taxation without parliamentary approval. Only Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates have implemented a pan-Gulf decision to impose VAT from this year. But Hajraf said the government may raise charges on public services to boost non-oil revenues.
By B Izzak