Page 11 - AfrOil Week 11 2020
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AfrOil POLICY AfrOil
 Algeria plans stimulus
to counter fall in oil prices
 ALGERIA
ALGERIAN President Abdelmajid Tebboune has ordered his government to prepare a sup- plementary budget to help guard the country’s economy against the steep drop in crude oil prices.
The president issued instructions to this effect on March 17, during a working meet- ing with cabinet members in Algiers. Those in attendance included Prime Minister Abdelaziz Djerad, the head of the central bank and the ministers of agriculture, energy and mining, finance, industry, trade. They gathered “to [assess] the country’s economic situation in the wake of the sharp collapse of oil barrel prices in international markets,” the presidential press office said in a statement.
Tebboune noted at the meeting that world crude markets had taken a bearish turn over the last week, partly because of the collapse of the OPEC-plus production deal and partly because of the decline in world energy demand that has followed the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak. These events are sure to have a nega- tive impact on Algeria’s economy, he said, but the supplementary budget will help contain the damage.
According to the statement, the president charged Finance Minister Abderrahmane Raouia with drawing up the measure. He told Raouia that the stimulus package should “include measures that would address the finan- cial effects of the current crisis and the collection of taxes and unpaid customs duties,” the press
office said.
As of press time, officials in Algiers had not
said how much money the budget might make available for investment in the local economy. Tebboune indicated on March 17, though, that he did not want to finance the measure through foreign loans. Instead, he instructed Raouia to seek assistance from private Islamic banks, saying that his government was not willing to “resort to borrowing.”
Nevertheless, the president also told the min- ister to “ensure that the loans granted by banks within the framework of private investments are repaid,” the statement said. It also noted that Tebboune had charged Benabderahmane Ayman, the governor of the central bank, with overseeing efforts to give the Algerian economy a boost through extra spending. ™
Lower oil prices may harm Algeria’s economy (Photo: Sakson Group)
 Liberia suspends fuel importers’ licences following shortages
 LIBERIA
LIBERIA has suspended the licences of all fuel importers so that it can conduct performance reviews, after some companies overdrew from state-run reserves earlier this year, sparking gas- oline shortages. Among the companies affected is France’s Total.
Officials claim that importers that make use of state storage tanks took out fuel exceeding their quotas. As a result, the government became aware in January that it only had 1.1mn gallons (5.0mn litres) of gasoline remaining in storage, a
quarter of the amount it thought it had.
Long queues at filling stations emerged in late January as supplies began to dry up. Shortages have put further pressure on the impoverished West African nation’s economy, already reeling from 30% inflation and currency depreciation. They have also stoked anger against authorities. The problems were compounded by the fact that Liberia’s main port in the capital Monrovia was unable to receive large fuel tankers because
of unusually shallow waters.
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  Week 11 18•March•2020 w w w . N E W S B A S E . c o m
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