Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Mena inflation to remain ‘uncomfortably high’

Food inflation across Mena countries rose by an average of 29% year-on-year Reuters/Ahmed Yosri
Inflation in the region was expected to be between 2.1 percent and 3.3 percent this year and fall lower in 2024
  • Inflation increased on average to 19.4% between March and December
  • IMF forecasts global GDP growth at 2.8% for 2023
  • Saudi Arabia’s annual inflation rate eased to 2.7% in March

Inflation in the Middle East and North Africa is to remain “uncomfortably high” for the foreseeable future, according to a leading banking expert.

Headline inflation across the 16 Mena economies increased on average to 19.4 percent year-on-year between March and December last year, as reported by the World Bank in its most recent economic update.

Food inflation across the countries rose by an average of 29 percent.

“My prediction would be that inflation will remain quite uncomfortably high,” said John Hardy, head of FX Strategy at Saxo Bank.

The International Monetary Fund’s World Economic Outlook, published earlier this week, predicted GDP growth in the Gulf will slow this year – as low as 0.9 percent in Kuwait – before most countries pick up the pace in 2024.

Saudi will remain at 3.1 percent, while Qatar is expected to experience a further drop to 1.8 percent.

Hardy said oil is “the currency for the Middle East” and while prices are still high, and income from exports remains high, inflation will be high in the region “just as everywhere”.

For every 10 percent rise in the price of oil, IMF models show a 0.1 percentage point reduction in global growth and a 0.3 percentage point increase in inflation, IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said on Tuesday, as quoted by Reuters.

Energy prices have declined sharply since mid-2022. The Brent crude oil spot price dropped from more than $120 per barrel in June 2022 to about $80 per barrel in February 2023 – which is still higher than before the war in Ukraine. 

Earlier this month Saudi Arabia and other Opec+ oil producers announced further oil output cuts of 1.16 million barrels per day, which will come into effect from May.

As a result, oil prices are predicted to rise higher, with $100 a barrel now looking more likely in the coming months, according to Edward Bell, senior director for market economics at Emirates NBD, Dubai’s largest bank.

The IMF raised its 2023 core inflation forecast to 5.1 percent, from a 4.5 percent prediction in January, saying it had yet to peak in many countries despite lower energy and food prices.

It forecast global real GDP growth at 2.8 percent for 2023 and 3 percent for 2024, marking a sharp slowdown from 3.4 percent growth in 2022 due to tighter monetary policy.

There was some good news this week, with Saudi Arabia reporting on Thursday that government data had showed that the kingdom’s annual inflation rate had eased to 2.7 percent in March, from 3 percent in February.

Latest articles

Qatar Airways said it was not able to meet high post-Covid demand due to shortage of new aircraft

Qatar Airways urges Boeing and Airbus to address delays

The head of state-run Qatar Airways has urged Airbus and Boeing to address supply chain issues to prevent airlines from “bleeding”. “I know they are under so much pressure when it comes to the supply chain market,” Reuters reported, quoting Badr Mohammed Al Meer speech at the Qatar Economic Forum in Doha. Airbus and Boeing need to […]

Amanat’s education platform includes Middlesex University Dubai

Dubai’s Amanat moves ahead with education platform IPO

Amanat Holdings is planning for a potential initial public offering (IPO) of its education platform. The Dubai-listed healthcare and education investment company aims to monetise its education platform by creating a new holding company.  Advisors have been appointed to explore the monetisation options to unlock significant shareholder value, the company said in a Dubai Finanical Market filing […]

A cargo plane lands at a Malaysian airport. MAHB’s airport network serves some of the world’s fastest-growing aviation markets

UAE wealth fund in $4bn bid to privatise Malaysian airport

A consortium that includes the UAE’s Abu Dhabi Investment Authority has announced a voluntary offer to acquire all the shares in Malaysia Airports Holdings Berhad (MAHB) for nearly $4 billion. The other consortium partners are Malaysian government-backed Khazanah Nasional and the Employees Provident Fund (EPF) and New York-headquartered Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP). Upon completion of the offer, Khazanah ownership stake in MAHB […]

Dubai-headquartered DP World has invested over €250 million in Romania since 2004, including grants from the EU

DP World’s $142m projects enhance Romania’s trade links

The global ports operator DP World has opened three new sites in Romania with an investment of €130 million ($142 million), enhancing the country’s growing status as a key trade hub in Europe.  Two new facilities were opened in Constanta, the largest container port on the Black Sea, following a €65 million investment. These include a five-hectare cargo […]