Iraq Seeking ‘Realistic’ Budget for 2022

Iraq’s Finance Minister Ali Allawi announced that the 2022 budget would have a reform dimension. (Reuters)
Iraq’s Finance Minister Ali Allawi announced that the 2022 budget would have a reform dimension. (Reuters)
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Iraq Seeking ‘Realistic’ Budget for 2022

Iraq’s Finance Minister Ali Allawi announced that the 2022 budget would have a reform dimension. (Reuters)
Iraq’s Finance Minister Ali Allawi announced that the 2022 budget would have a reform dimension. (Reuters)

Iraqi Finance Minister Ali Allawi announced that the 2022 budget, which the ministry began preparing a few days ago, will have a reform dimension, as it “different from previous budgets” and reflects “the reality of Iraq’s obligations.”

The minister explained in press statements that the ministry will seek to submit this new budget to parliament before the early parliamentary elections scheduled for October, adding that it will be a “reform budget, but it may be politically difficult.”

He said that the ministry “tried in the previous budget to do a similar thing,” as it “presented the budget in a way that shows officials the size of Iraq’s real obligations without paying it into arrears corners, so the number came to a large, and was not politically acceptable, so it was amended and the budget was issued” in its current form.

By this, Allawi most likely hinted at the difficulty of passing the new budget, given the high value of its deficit, as happened in the previous budget.

In the proposed 2021 budget bill, which the government submitted to parliament, the value of the deficit was estimated at 49 billion dollars, but the deputies made up the difference by canceling debts and dues from the state in exchange for energy sources from the account, especially dues for Iranian gas and energy, and other payments for infrastructure.

The value of the deficit in the 2021 budget, as approved by parliament, amounted to 19.8 billion dollars, compared to 23.1 billion dollars in 2019, knowing that Iraq did not approve the 2020 budget due to political tension.

The total value of revenues in the 2021 budget amounted to about 69.9 billion dollars, calculated based on crude oil export on the basis of a price of 45 dollars per barrel, and an export rate of three million and 250,000 barrels per day.

As for the value of the 2021 budget, it amounted to $89.7 billion, about 30% lower than the last budget approved in 2019.

Allawi explained that the price of a barrel in the new budget will be $50, which is an adjustable figure, but the value of a barrel of oil in the market is currently higher. Much more than 60 dollars.

Iraq, the second largest oil producer in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, is going through its worst economic crisis.

The poverty rate in the country has doubled in 2020, and 40% of the population of 40 million is considered poor, according to the World Bank, while the Iraqi dinar has lost 25% of its value.

Corruption, which has cost Iraq twice its total gross domestic product, i.e. more than $450 billion, is the main concern of Iraqis who suffer from a shortage of electricity, hospitals and schools. However, the minister said that Iraq’s financial situation has improved this year due to “the rise in the price of oil and the change in the exchange rate of the dinar.”

In the meantime, Iraq is negotiating with the International Monetary Fund on a loan amounting to between 3 to 4 billion dollars, as Allawi explained, hoping to reach an agreement with the Fund by the end of the year.

He explained that this “borrowing is of a monetary nature and gives credibility to the reforms” that the ministry wants to implement, and that “their end depends on our current situation and the 2022 budget if we are able to present it to parliament before the parliamentary elections.”



Mawani Reports 13% Growth in Container Handling at Ports in May 2025

Mawani Reports 13% Growth in Container Handling at Ports in May 2025
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Mawani Reports 13% Growth in Container Handling at Ports in May 2025

Mawani Reports 13% Growth in Container Handling at Ports in May 2025

Ports supervised by the Saudi Ports Authority (Mawani) recorded a 13% increase in container handling during May 2025, reaching 720,684 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs), compared with 639,736 TEUs in the same period last year.

Transshipment containers increased by 12.89%, totaling 149,143 TEUs compared to 132,112 last year. Imports also grew by 15.84%, reaching 292,223 TEUs, compared to 252,265 TEUs in May 2024, SPA reported.

Outgoing containers increased by 9.38%, totaling 279,318 TEUs compared to 255,359 TEUs in the same month last year.

Total handled cargo—including general cargo, solid bulk, and liquid bulk—increased by 1.40% to reach 21,337,699 tons, up from 21,042,684 tons in the corresponding period of 2024. This total includes 935,932 tons of general cargo, 5,059,899 tons of solid bulk cargo, and 15,341,868 tons of liquid bulk cargo.

The ports also received 1,635,489 heads of livestock, marking a 61.22% increase from 1,014,417 in the same period last year. Maritime traffic rose by 9.39%, with 1,083 vessels received compared to 990 last year. Passenger numbers increased by 68.15% to 95,231, up from 56,636 in May 2024. The number of vehicles grew by 13.09% to 84,352, compared to 74,590 last year.