Morocco Draws on IMF Precautionary and Liquidity Credit Line

Fishermen moor their boats during a state of emergency and home confinement orders due to coronavirus, in Rabat, Morocco, Tuesday, April 7, 2020. (AP Photo/Mosa'ab Elshamy)
Fishermen moor their boats during a state of emergency and home confinement orders due to coronavirus, in Rabat, Morocco, Tuesday, April 7, 2020. (AP Photo/Mosa'ab Elshamy)
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Morocco Draws on IMF Precautionary and Liquidity Credit Line

Fishermen moor their boats during a state of emergency and home confinement orders due to coronavirus, in Rabat, Morocco, Tuesday, April 7, 2020. (AP Photo/Mosa'ab Elshamy)
Fishermen moor their boats during a state of emergency and home confinement orders due to coronavirus, in Rabat, Morocco, Tuesday, April 7, 2020. (AP Photo/Mosa'ab Elshamy)

Morocco has started to draw on a $3-billion Precautionary and Liquidity credit Line from the International Monetary Fund to offset a contraction of its economy because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The five-year loan has a grace period of three years, the Moroccan central bank said.

It said the credit line would help "soften the impact of the (coronavirus) crisis on our economy and maintain our exchange reserves at an adequate level".

The credit would be used "mainly to finance the balance of payments and will not impact public debt, in a first for our transactions with the IMF,” the central bank said.

The new credit line is the fourth of its kind since August 2012. But it’s the first time that Morocco resorts to the Precautionary and Liquidity Line (PLL) because of the pandemic’s pressure on the economy.

The IMF, in a statement, said Rabat would "use funds purchased under the PLL to cope with the social and economic impact of COVID-19 and to maintain strong external buffers in a context of heightened uncertainties".

The High Commission for Planning (HCP) expected the economy to contract by 1.8 percent in the first quarter of 2020 instead of the estimated +2.1% had there not been any slowdown caused by the pandemic.

It also expected the Moroccan economy to suffer losses of 11 billion dirhams ($1.2 billion) in the same period as a result of the lockdown.

Losses were estimated at 4.1 billion dirhams ($432 million) in the first quarter, it said.



Gulf Petrochemical Sector Faces Mounting Challenges Amid Global Shifts

A SABIC facility in Jilin, China (Company photo)
A SABIC facility in Jilin, China (Company photo)
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Gulf Petrochemical Sector Faces Mounting Challenges Amid Global Shifts

A SABIC facility in Jilin, China (Company photo)
A SABIC facility in Jilin, China (Company photo)

Over the past five years, the Gulf’s petrochemical industry has found itself at a critical juncture. A mix of rapid geopolitical developments, the lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, and a slowdown in global economic growth, particularly in key markets like China and other parts of Asia, has disrupted longstanding business models and cast uncertainty over the future of the sector.

Industry experts and analysts, speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat, pointed to a convergence of four primary challenges facing Gulf petrochemical companies today. Among them are weak innovation strategies, limited domestic downstream capabilities, ongoing geopolitical volatility affecting supply chains, and increasingly stringent global environmental regulations on hydrocarbon-based products.

Fares Al-Qadheebi, an expert in international strategic partnerships and a member of the Saudi Economic Association, stressed that Gulf petrochemical firms must undergo a strategic transformation to remain viable.

He argued that the industry’s traditional reliance on government-subsidized feedstock is no longer sufficient in an evolving market landscape. For decades, these subsidies provided a competitive advantage. However, with subsidies gradually being phased out or restructured, companies now face mounting pressure to pivot toward higher-value, specialized products that align with strategic industries and evolving global demand.

The challenge, Al-Qadheebi said, lies in the sector’s historically low investment in research and development. Financial disclosures from several companies reflect limited R&D expenditure, resulting in a lag in innovation and product diversification. This hampers the ability of Gulf producers to shift from commodity chemicals to advanced materials that could drive future profitability.

At the same time, the region’s domestic manufacturing sector remains underdeveloped. Despite various industrial localization initiatives, Gulf countries continue to rely heavily on export markets, primarily China and India. This overreliance has left companies vulnerable to external shocks and market shifts, making it difficult to redirect surplus production into local value-added industries.

Geopolitical uncertainty is compounding the problem. Disruptions to global supply chains due to regional conflicts and shifting trade alliances have introduced logistical challenges and pricing volatility. This has forced some international buyers to seek alternative suppliers in more stable regions, undermining long-term relationships and jeopardizing the sector’s global competitiveness.

The rise of protectionist policies, particularly in the United States, has also led Gulf companies to reconsider their exposure to the American market and explore options such as relocating parts of their operations overseas.

Adding to the pressure are global environmental policies that increasingly target carbon-intensive products. Gulf producers are being pushed to develop low-emission technologies and environmentally compliant alternatives. While necessary, such changes significantly increase development and production costs and complicate market access.

Financial analyst Tareq Al-Atiq noted that these combined pressures have eroded profitability across much of the sector, with few signs of a swift recovery. He stressed the need for mergers, strategic alliances, and investments in carbon capture technologies to reduce operating costs and reposition the industry in growth markets, particularly in emerging economies with rising demand for plastics, fertilizers, and other petrochemical derivatives.

Looking ahead, experts suggest that the Gulf’s petrochemical giants must work more cohesively - potentially in an OPEC-style alliance - to coordinate production, innovation strategies, and market expansion efforts, or risk falling behind in an increasingly competitive global landscape.