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Saudi GDP growth drops to 2.8% during the first quarter due to Iran war.

ABU DHABI 30 April - Saudi Arabian real gross domestic products grew by 2.8% year-on year in the first quarter of this year, according to preliminary government estimates. This is a slowdown from the 3.7% growth a year earlier, as the 'economic impact' of the U.S. and Israeli 'war on Iran' on 'the 'world's largest oil exporter' becomes apparent. In response to U.S. and Israeli strikes that began late February, Tehran has launched attacks against Gulf states. These have caused major damage to energy facilities, and disrupted shipping in the Strait of Hormuz which normally handles about 20% of 'global oil and liquefied gas flows. Analysts say that the economic growth of Gulf states is expected to be sharply slowed this year. Several economies are forecast to contract in 2019 before recovering in 2027.

General Authority of Statistics data shows that non-oil activity grew by 2.8% and oil activity grew by 2.3% compared to the same period last year. Non-oil activities grew 5.5% in the same quarter of last year.

Oil activity declined by 7.2% in the quarter to March 31, resulting in a 1.5% decline in growth on a quarterly level. Oil activity fell 7.2% compared to the fourth quarter. Non-oil activities were almost unchanged.

Saudi Arabia began to increase oil production during the second half of last year, after it eased voluntary curbs that had been implemented over several years in order to support the oil market.

The International Monetary Fund stated that the Kingdom is expected to be less affected by the conflict than its Gulf neighbours because it has the ability to'redirect some exports via alternative routes and due to the relatively more resilient industrial production of non-oil. The International Monetary Fund has lowered its growth forecast for Saudi Arabia in 2026 to 3.1%. This is 1.4 percentage points below a January projection. An analyst poll predicted GDP growth of 2.6% for 2026.

(source: Reuters)