Gulf economies to grow at much slower pace in 2023 on lower oil revenues - Reuters poll | Reuters
Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) economies will grow at a much slower pace in 2023 than last year as expectations for muted gains in crude prices and oil production cuts take a toll on revenues, a Reuters poll found.
Oil prices have spiked nearly 20% since they hit this year's low of about $70 a barrel on March 20, largely driven by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC+) decision to reduce oil output by about 1.16 million barrels per day and China's reopening.
But further gains will largely be subdued over the coming months on slower global demand - not good news for the bloc which is heavily dependent on oil.
Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil producer, will expand 3.2% this year, less than half 2022's decade-high pace of 8.7%, according to the April 6-25 Reuters poll of 16 economists.
The growth rate was expected to be the same next year.
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