Oman posts budget surplus of $1.7bn in H1 of 2023

Oman’s real estate trading in June is up 18.9 percent from 1.1 billion rials recorded in the same month in 2022. (Shutterstock)
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Updated 13 August 2023
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Oman posts budget surplus of $1.7bn in H1 of 2023

RIYADH: Oman’s general budget recorded a surplus of 656 Omani million rials ($1.7 billion) at the end of the first half of 2023, compared to a surplus of 784 million rials achieved over the same period in 2022. 

According to the Fiscal Performance Bulletin issued by the Ministry of Finance, the public revenue amounted to 6.34 billion rials, down by 6 percent when compared to the 6.72 billion rials registered over the same period in 2022. 

However, the Ministry of Finance by the end of the first half of 2023 repaid more than 507 million rials to the private sector. It also repaid more than 1.5 billion rials against public debt, reducing the total public debt to 16.3 billion rials. 

Meanwhile, real estate trading in Oman witnessed a boom as its value surged 18.9 percent in June to hit 1.4 billion rials.   

This figure is up from the 1.1 billion rials recorded during the corresponding period in 2022, Oman News Agency reported.  

Data from the National Center for Statistics and Information revealed that the fees collected for all legal actions involving these transactions amounted to 33.4 million rials, reflecting an increase of 10.3 percent from June 2022.  

The data also indicated that the traded value of sale contracts amounted to 545.7 million rials for 32,907 contracts, reflecting an 11.1 percent increase in terms of value as well as an 8.5 percent drop with regard to the number of contracts. 

In addition to this, the traded value of mortgage contracts surged by 52.6 percent, recording 852.1 million rials for a total of 12,062 contracts, the data disclosed. 

HIGHLIGHTS

• The fees collected for all legal actions involving real estate transactions amounted to 33.4 million rials.

• The total number of hotel guests increased by 27.4 percent, recording about 943,068 guests at the end of June.

• The country registered a 4.7 percent increase in the GDP at the end of the first quarter.

As for the number of swap contracts, they reached 732 arrangements, with an accumulative value of 4.8 million rials. 

Moreover, the number of properties issued by the end of June 2023 amounted to about 117,870, an increase of 1.3 percent. 

The number of properties issued to citizens of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries reached 633, an increase of 79.3 percent.

Hotels revenues

On the other hand, data from the National Center for Statistics and Information  also revealed that the revenues of hotels with a rating of 3 to 5 stars in the country recorded about 110 million Omani rials by the end of June 2023, reflecting an increase of 32 percent compared to the 83 million Omani rials recorded by the corresponding period a year ago.

According to the statistics, the total number of hotel guests increased by 27.4 percent, recording about 943,068 guests at the end of June, compared to 740,050 guests in the same period of 2022.

As for the occupancy rate, it recorded a growth of 10.8 percent to reach 47.1 percent, compared to 42.5 percent during the same period a year ago.

According to the Fiscal Performance Bulletin issued by the Ministry of Finance, the State’s General Budget registered a surplus of 656 million Omani rials by the end of the first half of 2023, compared to a surplus of 784 million Omani rials achieved over the same period in 2022.

The bulletin revealed that the public revenue of the state budget at the end of the first half of 2023 amounted to 6.34 billion, down by 6 percent when compared to the 6.72 billion registered over the same period in 2022.

Oman continues to be one of the best-performing economies in the Gulf region, with its gross domestic product reaching 8.7 billion Omani rials at constant prices in the first quarter of 2023, official data released in July showed.  

The country registered a 4.7 percent increase in the GDP at the end of the first quarter against the same period last year, according to data revealed by Oman’s National Centre of Statistics and Information at the time.

The increase was primarily driven by non-petroleum activities that recorded a 4.6 percent increase year on year to reach 6.07 billion rials in the first quarter of 2023, the report added at the time. 


Saudi Arabia, Syria sign deal to launch 45 development initiatives 

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Saudi Arabia, Syria sign deal to launch 45 development initiatives 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia and Syria signed a framework agreement to launch 45 development initiatives, expanding economic cooperation as the two countries step up efforts to rebuild Syria’s economy. 

The deals, signed in Damascus between the Syrian Development Fund and the Saudi Development Committee, cover several sectors and are aimed at reviving economic activity, improving regional connectivity and attracting foreign investment, Syria’s state news agency SANA reported. 

The agreements were signed during a visit by a Saudi investment delegation led by Investment Minister Khalid Al-Falih, who said a separate real estate project was also agreed under the Saudi-Syrian Business Council. 

Saudi Arabia and Syria have been strengthening economic ties, with recent agreements focusing on investments in aviation, telecommunications, infrastructure and real estate. 

During the delegation’s visit to Syria, Saudi Arabia also announced a $1 billion investment in the country’s telecoms sector, including the SilkLink project aimed at enhancing digital connectivity. 

Al-Falih said the telecommunications project will be led by stc, Saudi Arabia’s largest telecom operator. 

Saudi carrier flynas also signed an agreement with the Syrian General Authority of Civil Aviation to establish a new commercial airline under the name “flynas Syria.” 

The new carrier will be a joint venture, with 51 percent ownership held by the Syrian General Authority of Civil Aviation and Air Transport and 49 percent by flynas. Operations are expected to commence in the fourth quarter of this year. 

The airline will operate flights to destinations across the Middle East, Africa and Europe, aimed at bolstering air traffic to and from Syria, enhancing regional and international connectivity, and meeting growing demand for air travel. 

“This partnership enhances economic integration and market connectivity, and supports development goals by advancing air transport infrastructure, ultimately serving the mutual interests of both nations and promoting regional economic stability,” Al-Falih said in a statement. 

He added that Saudi Arabia would also invest SR7.5 billion ($2 ‌billion) ‌to develop two ‌airports in Aleppo ‌over several phases. 

The minister also announced the launch of the Elaf Investment Fund to finance major projects in Syria, and said banking transfer channels between the two nations had been reactivated following the lifting of economic sanctions.