Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has been detrimental on hydrocarbon-overdependent Gulf states. The effects of the unprecedented oil price declines and substantial COVID-relief packages on Gulf economies are critical, as they can become enduring and foundational if the energy transitions accelerate to meet the Paris Agreement targets. Thus, this study assesses the impacts of the pandemic on the long-term economic sustainability of Gulf economies, using illustrations from Kuwait using the economy-wide WAFRA Applied General Equilibrium (WAFRAGE) Model applied to Kuwait (WAFRAGE-KWT Model). The simulation results indicate that post-pandemic, the economic resiliency of these states has significantly waned, primarily because the pandemic hit during a state of weakened economic resilience following the 2014 oil price collapse and subsequent government response. Although COVID-relief packages appeared in the form of counter-cyclical fiscal policy, Gulf states are unable to realize this policy's full potential benefits. They are incapable of being truly counter-cyclical under their current economic structure and the consumption-based nature of the COVID-relief packages, which protect oligopolistic firms' profits and reduce production, non-oil exports, and economic efficiency. The eroded fiscal and economic resiliency also threatens Gulf states' ability to weather energy transitions. The implication of the findings is that long-term sustainability requires immediate phased implementation of economic and energy reforms.

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