Friday, September 14, 2007

High oil prices put Kuwait on verge of record surplus

KUWAIT: The wealthy Gulf emirate of Kuwait appears headed for a record budget surplus this year thanks to oil prices which cruised to a new all-time high.

Comment:This is the profit this tiny country made-multiply this figure by 10-25 times and you can better understand our enemies' motivation and ABILITY to wear the West down economically. They know they cannot beat us militarily BUT they do believe they can persevere better than the West. They are doing to us what we did to the Soviet Union.We must remain viligent AND we must take away their weapon called oil revenue. As world oil prices topped $80 a barrel for the first time Wednesday, the price of Kuwaiti oil, mostly medium and heavy crude, also hit a new record high of $71.72 a barrel.

National Bank of Kuwait (NBK) said the average price for Kuwaiti oil would range from $63 to $67.6 a barrel for the 2007/2008 fiscal year which began April 1, against a budget price of just $36.

Accordingly, revenues will range from $57 billion to $62 billion, compared to the budget projections of $28.9 billion, the report said.
The budget projects expenditures at $39.2 billion, but NBK said actual spending will be about 8 percent lower.

This would leave a budget surplus of between $19 billion and $25.2 billion, depending on oil prices, compared to a projected deficit of $10.33 billion.The largest surplus boasted by Kuwait was $24 billion in the 2005/2006 fiscal year.
http://www.dailystar.com.lb

In the past year, the surplus dropped to $18.5 billion despite posting record revenues of $55.2 billion, because of a one-time payment of arrears to the state-funded pension agency.

This would be the emirate's ninth straight year of budget windfalls because of strong world oil prices.

During the previous eight fiscal years, the emirate posted surpluses totaling around $72.5 billion.

By law, 10 percent of total revenues is placed in the Kuwait Fund for Future Generations, which has assets of some $174 billion.

Kuwait also has $39 billion in its public reserve, putting its total financial surplus at $213 billion, the highest in its history.

Returns on the fund's assets, estimated at well over $10 billion a year, do not appear in the regular budget.

Kuwait, which holds about 10 percent of global crude reserves, pumps around 2.4 million barrels a day. - AFP

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