Kuwait Projects $40 Billion Deficit As Infighting Delays Reform
Photographer: Tasneem Alsultan/Bloomberg
Kuwait forecast its eighth consecutive budget deficit for the year starting April 1, unveiling a fiscal plan that sees a near-7% rise in spending as political bickering delays reforms and stymies borrowing.
The shortfall is projected at 12.1 billion dinars ($40 billion), 13.8% below the current year’s estimate of 14 billion dinars, according to the finance ministry. Kuwait won’t be transferring 10% of total revenue to the Future Generations Fund, or wealth fund, in line with a law passed by parliament last year to halt such transfers in years of deficit. The move was part of a series of urgent measures aimed at preserving liquidity in the General Reserve, or treasury, which is being rapidly depleted due to a drop in the price of crude, the main source of income for the Gulf Arab state.