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Saudi Arabia's government will probably absorb the extra cost of a public sector wage hike without pressure on its finances or a rise in inflation, Saudi HSBC Holdings Plc affiliate SABB bank said.
Saudi Arabia's cabinet last month approved plans to increase public sector wages by 5 per cent per year for the next three years to offset the eroding effect on salaries of rising inflation. It also cut port-handling charges on imports by 50 per cent for three years.
The measures, including a 10 per cent increase in social insurance benefits, will cost the government about 66 billion Saudi riyals, SABB said in a report received on Thursday.
"Two key reasons lead us to believe that the additional costs will not be an onerous burden on the state," SABB Chief Economist John Sfakianakis wrote in the report.
Nor will the salary rise "lead to any significant upward inflationary pressures in 2008," he said.
The government continues to enjoy fiscal surplus, with the only risk a "severe" fall in oil prices, Sfakianakis said in the report. And the measures are reversible. The salary increase is retroactive to January 10.
Average inflation will probably rise to 5 percent this year, before falling to 4.7 per cent next year and 4.3 per cent in 2010 as bottlenecks in the economy ease and food prices subside, Sfakianakis said in the report. (Reuters) |
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