Saudi Arabia Veers From Russia With Biggest IMF Downgrade

OPEC+ allies Saudi Arabia and Russia are at the opposite extremes of the International Monetary Fund’s latest global outlook despite joint efforts to cut crude output.

(Bloomberg) — OPEC+ allies Saudi Arabia and Russia are at the opposite extremes of the International Monetary Fund’s latest global outlook despite joint efforts to cut crude output.

The kingdom is getting the steepest growth downgrade among major economies from the IMF at a time when the Kremlin’s wartime budget stimulus helps offset its oil curbs. Saudi Arabia, the fastest-growing economy in the Group of 20 last year, is on track to expand just 1.9% in 2023, a downward revision of 1.2 percentage points from the fund’s earlier estimate. 

By contrast, the IMF improved its view of Russia by 0.8 percentage point and now expects the economy to add 1.5%, after what it said was a “large fiscal stimulus” in the first half.

For Saudi Arabia, the downgrade “reflects production cuts announced in April and June in line with an agreement through OPEC+,” the IMF said in its World Economic Outlook published Tuesday. 

After collecting a significant oil bounty in 2022, the kingdom’s revenue from exports — including crude and refined products — dropped to $19 billion in May, the lowest since September 2021.

Read: Saudi Oil Revenue Drops to Lowest Since 2021 as Prices Falter

The diverging assessments underscore the economic cost of Saudi efforts to shoulder the burden of supporting oil markets after announcing plans to curb daily production by 1 million barrels through July and August. Some analysts have even warned the kingdom’s gross domestic product could shrink, especially if supply cuts are carried through to the end of the year.

Last year, the Saudi economy expanded by nearly 9%, propelled by a spike in energy prices following the Russian invasion of Ukraine.  

The war, now in its 18th month, has prompted sweeping international sanctions on Russia, forcing the Kremlin to lift spending and crank up industrial production to support the military.

While Russia has promised to cut its crude output by 500,000 barrels a day in March from February and maintain those curbs through 2024, the government’s classified oil-output data makes it difficult to assess whether the country is complying with its commitment in full.

Russia expects its oil production, including a light oil called condensate, to fall 3.7% from last year to around 10.34 million barrels a day. The outlook factors in the Kremlin’s pledge to cut its output in response to Western sanctions, which include a price cap on crude and oil products exports.

Read: Saudi Oil Cuts Throw Last Year’s Standout Economy Into Slow Lane

Crude oil prices have gained in recent weeks as the cuts have come into effect. But concerns remain that higher interest rates could throttle economic activity in the US and Europe. 

The IMF earlier said Saudi Arabia would need Brent prices to average over $80 a barrel to balance its budget this year. If production cuts were to be prolonged and oil prices don’t pick up significantly, the kingdom’s budget may fall deeper into deficit. 

Bloomberg Economics projects the Saudi economy will contract by 0.1% this year if the government raises production in September and by 1% if it keeps the curbs in place. 

Growth of 1.9% would put Saudi Arabia barely ahead of the US, which is forecast to expand 1.8% this year, and far behind major emerging economies such as India and China. Brazil received the only upgrade bigger than Russia’s.

The impact of a slowdown in Saudi Arabia will be felt across the Middle East and Central Asia, according to the IMF. Economic growth in the region is set to slow to an estimated 2.5% from 5.4% in 2022.

Still, growth is more resilient in the Saudi non-oil economy, the focus of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s transformation plan, which employs the vast bulk of citizens. Officials expect it to expand 5.8% this year. 

“Private investment, including from ‘giga-project’ implementation, continues to support strong non-oil gross domestic product growth,” the IMF said.

(Updates with Saudi oil revenue drop in fifth paragraph.)

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2023 Bloomberg L.P.