DUBAI (Reuters) – Saudi Arabia’s economy shrank 4.2 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier, government data showed on Tuesday, a smaller contraction than the second quarter when the economy was reeling from coronavirus-linked lockdowns.
The economy expanded by 1.2 percent on a seasonally-adjusted quarter-on-quarter basis in the third quarter from a contraction of 4.9 percent in the previous quarter, Saudi Arabia’s General Authority for Statistics said.
The “flash estimates” for quarterly gross domestic product did not have a breakdown on how the oil and non-oil sectors performed in the three-month period to the end of September.
The authority said the estimates came out at the end of the reference quarter, when information was still partial and subject to a high degree of approximation.
“A sequential pickup in economic activity was expected in the third quarter with the easing of lockdown measures and given the pent-up demand,” said Monica Malik, chief economist at Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank.
“However, the pace of recovery would have been dampened by the increase in the VAT rate.”
Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, in July tripled a value added tax to 15 percent as it sought to shore up finances hit by the twin shock of low oil prices and the coronavirus.
The latest Saudi data came after IHS Markit Saudi Arabia Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) showed Saudi Arabia’s non-oil private sector expanded for the second consecutive month in October as output grew at a solid pace, though concerns remained over the pace of recovery from the pandemic.
Saudi Arabia’s economic recovery, however, is expected to remain slow, Jason Tuvey, a senior emerging markets economist at Capital Economics, wrote before the data release.
“Persistent low oil prices reinforce our view that policymakers are unlikely to row back on fiscal austerity,” he said.
Reporting by Saeed Azhar and Davide Barbuscia; Editing by Kim Coghill and Andrew Heavens