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Business / Middle East Business

Yemen central bank exceeds cap on govt loans

Published: 10 Jun 2013 - 11:47 pm | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 11:58 pm

DUBAI: Yemen’s central bank exceeded the legal limit on how much it may lend to the government by 347.9bn rials ($1.6bn) last year, its annual financial statement showed.

The disclosure underlines the severe financial pressures faced by Yemen as it struggles to rebuild its economy after years of war and political unrest. 

The central bank did not reply to a request for comment, and its officials were not available for comment. It was not clear whether the central bank would be penalised for exceeding its limit or whether it would change its lending policy this year.

Under the law governing the central bank, it may provide temporary emergency financing to the government in exceptional circumstances if that is consistent with its monetary policy.

Such loans may be granted if the total outstanding amount does not exceed 25 percent of the budget’s average ordinary revenue in the three previous financial years, the law says. Maturities of loans should not exceed six months.

However, the central bank’s total financing to the government, including loans to state companies, stood at 937.9bn rials in 2012, above the authorised limit of approximately 590bn, auditors Deloitte & Touche (ME) with Dr Hajar said. 

“In addition, the maturities of such loans and advances have exceeded six months, being extended from time to time,” the auditors said in the central bank’s financial statement for 2012, posted on its website.

Its board of directors discussed and approved the statement on May 7, the website said.

The government’s finances have struggled since protests against former president Ali Abdullah Saleh brought the economy to the brink of collapse in 2011, with attacks on oil pipelines squeezing vital budget revenues.

The International Monetary Fund expects Yemen’s budget deficit to widen to 5.8 percent of gross domestic product, or about $2.3bn, from 5.5 percent in 2012.

Last year wealthy Gulf Arab states, Western governments and other donors pledged $7.9bn in aid over several years to Yemen, the second-poorest Arab state after Mauritania, but only a small fraction of the money has so far arrived.     

Saudi Arabia boosted the central bank’s reserves with a 12-year, $1bn loan last September. The repayment is to start after four years.

The central bank’s outstanding emergency loans to the central government amounted to 679bn rials last year, down from 691.6bn in 2011, the auditors said. Emergency loans and advances to state corporations stood at 258.9bn rials in 2012, up from 156.5bn. 

Reuters