• Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Staff Email
Tuesday, December 9, 2025
  • Login
TheMattersPress
  • Home
  • News
  • Features
  • Thematterspress
  • Multimedia
    • Audio
    • Photo
    • Video
  • About us
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Features
  • Thematterspress
  • Multimedia
    • Audio
    • Photo
    • Video
  • About us
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
TheMattersPress
No Result
View All Result
Home Economy/Technology

Conflict, Indebtedness cause uncertainty in Middle East and North Africa

Middle East

The Matters Press by The Matters Press
May 15, 2024
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0
Conflict, Indebtedness cause uncertainty in Middle East and North Africa

The World Bank’s new Middle East and North Africa Economic Update, entitled Conflict and Debt in the Middle East and North Africa, shows that lackluster growth, rising indebtedness and heightened uncertainty due to the conflict in the Middle East are impacting economies across the region.

RELATED POSTS

ECOFEST 2025: A facet of African cultural engineering showcased in the digital pavilions

Restitution and Protection of Cultural Property: Felwine Sarr Calls for “Reimagining the African Museum”

ECOFEST 2025: Addressing Key Challenges to Artistic Mobility within the Region

According to the report, MENA economies are expected to return to low growth akin to the decade prior to the pandemic.

MENA’s gross domestic product (GDP) is forecast to rise to 2.7% in 2024, which is a tepid increase from 1.9% in 2023.

As in 2023, oil importing and oil exporting countries are likely to grow at less disparate rates than 2022, when higher oil prices boosted growth in oil exporters.

For Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, the 2024 growth uptick reflects expectations of robust non-oil sector activity and fading out of oil production cuts towards the end of the year.

GDP growth in almost all oil importing countries is expected to decelerate.

The report looks at the economic impact of the conflict in the Middle East on the region. Economic activity in Gaza has come to a near standstill.

The GDP of the Gaza strip dropped by 86% in last quarter of 2023.

The West Bank has plunged into a recession, with simultaneous public and private sector crises.

A recent World Bank report goes into further depth on damages to the Gaza Strip and catastrophic impacts on the people of Gaza.

The economic impact of the conflict on the rest of the region has remained relatively contained, but uncertainty has increased.

For example, the shipping industry has coped with shocks to maritime transport by rerouting vessels away from the Red Sea, but any prolonged disruptions to routes through the Suez Canal could increase commodity prices regionally and globally.

The report also looks at rising indebtedness in the MENA region. Between 2013 and 2019, the median debt-to-GDP ratio for MENA economies increased by more than 23 percentage points. The pandemic made things worse as declines in revenue, together with pandemic support spending, increased financing needs for many countries.

This rising indebtedness is heavily concentrated in oil-importing economies, which now have a debt-to-GDP ratio 50 percent higher than the global average of emerging market and developing economies. Approaching 90 percent of GDP in 2023, oil-importing countries in MENA have a debt-to-GDP ratio almost three times higher than that of oil exporting countries in the region.

The report presents evidence that oil-importing countries in MENA have been unable to grow out of debt or inflate their debt away, making fiscal discipline essential to curb indebtedness.

Critically, off-budget items which have played a large role in some MENA economies have been to the detriment of debt and fiscal transparency. The challenge for oil exporters is one of economic and fiscal-revenue diversification, given the structural change in global oil markets and the rising demand for renewable sources of energy.

Overall, MENA economies need to undertake structural reforms, chief among them transparency, to unlock growth and forge a sustainable path ahead.

Tags: Middle East
ShareTweetPin
The Matters Press

The Matters Press

Related Posts

ECOFEST 2025: A facet of African cultural engineering showcased in the digital pavilions
Energy

ECOFEST 2025: A facet of African cultural engineering showcased in the digital pavilions

December 5, 2025
Restitution and Protection of Cultural Property: Felwine Sarr Calls for “Reimagining the African Museum”
Foreign

Restitution and Protection of Cultural Property: Felwine Sarr Calls for “Reimagining the African Museum”

December 5, 2025
ECOFEST 2025: Addressing Key Challenges to Artistic Mobility within the Region
Foreign

ECOFEST 2025: Addressing Key Challenges to Artistic Mobility within the Region

December 4, 2025
Senate Confirms Musa as Defence Minister
Energy

Senate Confirms Musa as Defence Minister

December 3, 2025
Culture and border fragilities: Experts call for a new preventive local diplomacy
Foreign

Culture and border fragilities: Experts call for a new preventive local diplomacy

December 3, 2025
West Africa: Cultural Stakeholders reimagine urban spaces to build TV peace
Energy

West Africa: Cultural Stakeholders reimagine urban spaces to build TV peace

December 3, 2025
Next Post

Inflation rate slows down in April - NBS

Experts validate Nigeria’s implementation strategies for success under AfCFTA

Federal, states, councils share N1.208trn in April

Recommended Stories

Value of China’s export to US dips

Chinese Yuan weakens to 6.3795 against USD

April 12, 2022
Rush to banks as CBN takes further action on BVN defaulters

Rush to banks as CBN takes further action on BVN defaulters

April 18, 2023
Rush to banks as CBN takes further action on BVN defaulters

Do it yourself, link your NIN, BVN to GTB, Zenith, UBA, Access and Stanbic bank accounts

March 12, 2024

Popular Stories

  • Rising prices of goods cause protests in Morocco

    Rising prices of goods cause protests in Morocco

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • NLNG not responsible for gas supply shortfall, price hike

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • NCC sets fresh operational fees, spectrum prices for telecom operators

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Hoarding causes hike in prices of grains

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Prices of Petrol, diesel increase in November

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
TheMattersPress

We bring you the best news update in Nigeria

LEARN MORE »

Recent Posts

  • ECOFEST 2025: A facet of African cultural engineering showcased in the digital pavilions
  • Restitution and Protection of Cultural Property: Felwine Sarr Calls for “Reimagining the African Museum”
  • ECOFEST 2025: Addressing Key Challenges to Artistic Mobility within the Region

Categories

  • Agriculture
  • Economy/Technology
  • Energy
  • Entertainment/sports
  • Features
  • Foreign
  • Multimedia
  • Natural Resources
  • News
  • Oil and Gas
  • Photo
  • Politics
  • Security
  • Thematterspress
  • Uncategorized
  • Video

© 2025 Domo Tech World - Powered by Thematterspress.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Features
  • Thematterspress
  • Multimedia
    • Audio
    • Photo
    • Video
  • About us
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Domo Tech World - Powered by Thematterspress.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Call Us