Title: Secular trends in Gulf geoeconomics
1Secular trends in Gulf geo-economics
- Steffen Hertog
- Kuwait Professor, Sciences Po
- Second Franco-Singaporean conference on the
impact of the Middle East on Southeast Asia and
Europe
2The next 40 minutes
- Setting the stage Gulf and MENA growth trends
- MENAs role in the global distribution of
resources - ? Trends in trade
- ? Trends in FDI
- Intra-regional power shifts in MENA
- Comparing MENA oil state foreign policies
- Where are Sovereign Wealth Funds headed?
- Gulf public enterprises as international
strategic actors
3No other high-income region has grown as fast as
the GCC (source IIF)
4The rest of MENA has also been growing faster
than the rest of the world, but it does not
matter much
5Intra-regional power shifts
- Intra-regional trade stagnates at around 10 of
the total, but intra-regional investment has been
booming - An estimated 60 billion of Gulf money was
allocated in the wider MENA region 2002-2006 - Increasing role of FDI, including in new sectors
like - Finance
- Manufacturing
- Telecoms and ICT
- Increasingly proactive policy to solicit Gulf
capital - Gulf capital as political capital in a region in
which military assets have lost much of their
value?
6Still, the GCC remains a SMALL players on the
global scene in terms of GDP (source Deutsche
Bank)
7The Gulf matters for a different reason
- Feedstock
- Oil, but also
- Gas
- Petrochemicals
- Other basic inputs for heavy industry
- Capital surpluses
- SWFs, but also private overseas capital
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10Source Gulf Investment House
11Why the Gulf and Asia are emerging as tomorrows
geo-economic axis factor complementarity
12Long-term trends in GCC exports (IMF DOTS)
13Long-term trends in GCC imports (IMF DOTS)
14Trade follows factors, but does investment?
- Despite much talk, only to some extent
- Source IIF
- Western markets remain deeper and more liquid
- Asia has its own capital resources
15Will a large-scale shift of Gulf capital towards
Asia happen?
- Not in the wake of the current credit crisis
- In the long run? Depends on
- a) whether there are actually surpluses to
allocate, which is determined by - Scale of losses in the current crisis
- Domestic spending policies in the Gulf
- Long-term oil prices
- b) Gulf investors appetite for risk
- c) Asian opportunities, specifically Chinas
willingness to engage in quid-pro-quos of FDI vs.
feedstock
16The geo-economics of Gulf oveseas capital basic
figures
- Gross official reserves of MENA have increased at
a 5-year CAGR of 43.3 from 180 billion in 2003
to 1.087 trillion in 2008. - Aggregate current account surpluses of the MENA
economies - estimated to reach 495 billion by end of 2008
- estimated to decline to 406 billion in 2009.
- 2009 might look at lot worse
-
- Sources IIF, Deutsche
17Is the GCCs window of surpluses
closing?(Source Citi)
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19Gulf governments could run fiscal deficits next
year already (Source Citi)
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21Relative importance of oil exporter SWFs likely
to decline
22Recent overseas capital trends
- Further shift away from US assets after 2006
(50 of gt900 billion allocated 2003 to 2008
went into non-US markets) - But flight to quality with the credit crisis
- US-denominated assets have made a comeback, for
the time being - SWFs have burned their fingers with more
speculative assets losses of about 15 - ? Low appetite for risk
- ? Together with lower surpluses, large-scale
inflows into Asia unlikely
23The new Gulf SOEs
- A new generation of large, multinational
enterprises has emerged in the Gulf, most of
which are state-owned - Much more than SWFs, they have been aiming
specifically at Asian markets - Tourism and real estate
- Logistics
- Heavy industry
- Telecoms
- Large enough to make a substantial impact, small
enough to thrive in niches - Apart from trade, the burgeoning Gulf SOEs could
emerge as the main economic link between the two
regions
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25Gulf service exports telecoms as new FDI niche
26What about other oil states in the region?
- Iran, Libya, Algeria (post-)populist,
republican regimes are likely to suffer more
from the crisis than the Gulf states - Smaller surpluses
- Worse fiscal management
- higher breakeven oil prices
- higher inflation
- Less successful diversification policies (no
successful SOEs e.g.) - Worse public sector legacies
- Gulf crisis resilience is higher
27Populist oil states have much smaller resources
28Linkages of economics and politics are there
security dimensions to the Gulfs geo-economic
repositioning?
- Not many! Gulf states want
- A calm environment and to depoliticize their
economic relations as far as possible - The calmer the Middle East is, the more powerful
they are relative to other MENA states - Different from China (but similar to Singapore),
their economic rise is not tied to any
geo-political ambitions - They want multiple partners to increase
interdependence - But they have no alternative to the US security
umbrella - Will China develop geo-strategic ambitions in the
Gulf? - Not any time soon