Editor's Note:
In January the Saudi government, responding to concerns that inflation was eroding consumer purchasing power and confidence -- inflation was running about 7 percent that month -- announced a 17 point alleviation plan. In a thorough
analysis of the plan's impact Jadwa Investment's Chief Economist, Brad Bourland, noted, "The measures will not eliminate inflation as a major concern, but will trim some specific price rises." The report, available on SUSRIS (link below), concluded by noting, "There is no one policy that would have a decisive effect on inflation. Furthermore, many of the moves being publicly discussed would impact adversely elsewhere in the economy. We therefore think that the government will continue to take small, targeted steps."
This week Arab
News, in an editorial, outlined the impact of inflation in the Kingdom and urged more aggressive government intervention. Today we provide that editorial for your consideration.
Inflation:
Government Action Needed
[Arab News Editorial - August 5, 2008]
In April, the head of the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA), Hamad Al-Sayari, warned that inflation in the Kingdom could cross the 10-percent threshold. However, he thought it would ease in the second half of the year as the government�s anti-inflationary measures took hold and global demand for commodities fell. He was spot-on about the first part. Inflation, according to the government�s own figures, hit a 30-year high in June: 10.6 percent, as opposed to 10.4 percent the previous month.
The warning notwithstanding, it is a shocking figure. Inflation is causing misery to millions across the Kingdom. Saudi Arabia is not, despite fantasies abroad, a land of billionaires. Most Saudis and expatriates working here are on fixed salaries and struggle to keep up with rising prices. They are failing. The government understands the dangers only too well. Soaring inflation is as potentially dangerous as soaring unemployment. Its efforts to combat inflation have included salary increases for state-sector employees and a cut in customs tariffs on food from 20 to five percent. But so far, they do not seem to be working.
Expatriates are worst hit as most of them work in the private sector.
It must be hoped that the second part of the SAMA prediction, that inflation will now start to reduce, will prove true. But on present form, there are strong grounds for thinking otherwise. There is no sign that the global commodities boom is over or even slowing down. On the contrary, economists, particularly in the US, expect another 12 months of rising commodity prices. Only in mid-2009 do they anticipate a fall. That may explain the forecast from the Samba Financial Group that inflation will continue to rise. It expects that it will average between 11 and 12 percent this year before easing to around 10 percent next year.
It must be said that the prospect of inflation �easing� to 10 percent next year or the notion that June�s 30-year high is �containable� (as one Saudi-based banker said) will be greeted with deep concern by many who find present prices beyond their means. Moreover, if 11-12 percent is the expected average inflation for this year, then that suggests that it is going to rise even higher before 2008 is finished.
Further government action is needed, and fast. But the options are not easy. High oil prices feeding into massive government spending on infrastructure and the building of new economic cities has inevitably fueled inflation but it would be a folly to cut back there: This country needs to build new industries and economic zones; without them and the jobs they will bring, the future is unthinkable. As to the global commodities� boom, it has been a significant factor and may necessitate increased subsidies, but it is not the only cause for inflation. The same goes for the fall in the dollar to which the riyal is pegged. Its effects, moreover, have been overstated. In June, it fell around 1.25 percent against the euro and against the yen it actually rose. That hardly explains a 15.8-percent rise in Saudi food prices in the same period.
There is another factor against which the government can act � and should be active punitively: Greed.
There are property owners and businessmen who are putting up prices because everyone else seems to be doing it, because they can blame it on the dollar, on global prices, the costs of energy or whatever � and they have been getting away with it because no one challenges them. The government needs to look at the whole area of rentals and food pricing. It needs to bring in mechanisms to enforce competition. And it needs to take action against those who are profiteering.
Source: Arab News
Related Items:
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The Inflation Alleviation Plan - Brad Bourland, Chief Economist & Head of Research Jadwa Investment - SUSRIS IOI - Mar 6, 2008
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Saudi Arabia's Business Confidence - SUSRIS IOI - May 2, 2008
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Why food prices have risen in Saudi Arabia - Brad Bourland - SUSRIS IOI - Oct 11, 2007
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Dollars and Riyals: Floating Currencies and the Former Fed Chief - SUSRIS IOI - Feb 26, 2008
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The Riyal�s Peg to the Dollar [Part 1] - Brad Bourland - SUSRIS IOI - Sept 4, 2007
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The Riyal�s Peg to the Dollar [Part 2] - Brad Bourland - SUSRIS IOI - Sept 4, 2007
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The Saudi Economy's Golden Era: Phase Two [Part 1] - Brad Bourland - SUSRIS IOI - Aug 24, 2007
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The Saudi Economy's Golden Era: Phase Two [Part 2] - Brad Bourland - SUSRIS IOI - Aug
24, 2007
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Saudi Arabia's Business Confidence Q2-2008 - SABB
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The Saudi Economy: Recent Performance and Prospects for 2008-09 - Office of the Chief Economist of Samba
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Impact of the Weak Global Economy - Brad Bourland, Chief Economist & Head of Research Jadwa Investment
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The Construction Site Called Saudi Arabia - Jad Mouawad
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GCC Common Market Becomes a Reality -
P.K. Abdul Ghafour
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AMF Chief Urges GCC States to Drop Dollar Peg -
P.K. Abdul Ghafour, Arab News