As posted in the current World Media Watch...
3//Arab News Monday,13 , October, 2003 (17, Sha`ban,1424 )
http://www.arabnews.com/?page=6§ion=0&article=33551&d=13&m=10&y=2003 IRAQ: LIBERALIZING A SHATTERED ECONOMY
Henry T. Azzam, Special to Arab News
(Henry T. Azzam is chief executive officer at Jordinvest.)
SNIP---discussion of how the oil pipelines are being sabotaged
Iraq’s oil production level so far this year has averaged 1.088mbpd, while Brent crude has been trading at an average of $28.5 a barrel during the first three quarters of the year. Assuming oil production cost of around $2 a barrel and another $ 3a barrel discount of Iraqi crude to Brent crude, this leaves an average price so far this year for Iraqi crude of $23.5 a barrel. Iraq’s total oil GDP would then come to around $9.3 billion at present levels of oil production and prices.
A series of GDP estimates in current US dollars for all the Arab countries including Iraq are published in the authoritative annual Arab Unified Economic Report prepared and edited by the Arab League, Arab Fund for Economic and Social Development and the Arab Monetary Fund. This report shows Iraq’s GDP for 2001 at $81 billion, the third highest after Saudi Arabia and Egypt. These figures are based on official foreign exchange rate when converting GDP value of non-oil sectors from Iraqi dinars to US dollars. If the market rate of 2,500 dinars to the dollar were used, Iraq’s GDP figure would not exceed $15 billion, and the country’s total GDP this year would be in the range of $25 billion.
Iraq is heavily indebted country. In mid-July, the Paris Club of creditor countries estimated that Iraq owed a total of $42 billion to its member governments ($21 billion in principal and $ 21billion in late interest payments). The largest Paris Club creditors to Iraq are Japan ($4.1 billion), Russia ($3.5 billion), France ($3 billion) and the US ($2.2 billion). Non-Paris Club public creditors and private creditors have yet to publish their own estimates for debt owed to them by Iraq. However, various independent studies have put this debt at around $63 billion (including late interest payments), with the bulk owed to governments of the Gulf countries. Iraq’s total external debt is therefore likely to be close to $105 billion. In addition to its massive external debt, Iraq is also obliged to pay compensation awarded by the UN Compensation Commission to victims of its 1990 invasion of Kuwait. As of end-July 2003 , awarded compensation remaining to be paid by Iraq amounted to $28 billion bringing the country’s total external obligations to $133 billion.
No detailed estimates of the likely costs of reconstructing Iraq’s economy have yet been released by any international institutions. In regards to the oil sector, independent estimates indicate that it could cost up to $10 billion to restore Iraq’s oil production to its pre- 1991 level of 3.5mbpd. In terms of the non-oil sector, the sums are far larger. The Coalition Provisional Authority estimates that it would cost $13 billion to rebuild Iraq’s electricity infrastructure alone, and it would take $16 billion to restore the country’s water supplies.
However, these are just two elements of a vast reconstruction program that could be as high as $100 billion. Iraq’s private sector is still in its infancy and given the country’s underdeveloped financial and capital markets, economic growth will be mainly driven in the coming few years by government expenditures financed by oil revenues.
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Read the whole article to get the full situation. Author feels it is too soon to start selling everything off...and a new government has the right to cancel it all.