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Qatar budget outlay to go up 5% for World Cup

A minister said the rise in budget was due to the ‘temporary increase’ in expenses related to the World Cup.
  • The emirate's planned expenses for 2022 rose by 4.9 percent from last year to QAR204.3 billion ($55.7 billion)
  • Qatar conservatively projects total revenue of QAR196 billion, based on an average oil price of $55 a barrel

Qatar foresees a nearly 5 percent rise in government expenditures next year due to its hosting of the 2022 World Cup, budget estimates released on Tuesday, December 7, show.

The emirate’s planned expenses for 2022 rose by 4.9 percent from last year to QAR204.3 billion ($55.7 billion), Finance Minister Ali bin Ahmed al-Kuwari said, according to the official Qatar News Agency.

This was “mainly due to the temporary increase in operational expenses related to the World Cup hosting activities, which include security and operating costs for all related events to the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022,” the minister said.

Qatar, the world’s biggest exporter of liquefied natural gas, conservatively projects total revenue of QAR196 billion, based on an average oil price of $55 a barrel, Kuwari said.

That leaves an expected deficit of QAR8.3 billion, which the finance ministry would work to cover “through available cash balances and issue of local and foreign debt instruments if the need arises,” he said.

A year ago, the government projected its 2020 budget surplus of QAR500 million would be wiped out in 2021 after energy prices fell due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Kuwari said there had been a “remarkable recovery in global energy prices”.