BAGHDAD, June 8 (Reuters) - If oil prices continue to rise and Iraq's oil
output and exports improve, the government may be able to pass a more generous
supplementary budget later this year, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki said
on Monday.
Iraq, just emerging from years of sectarian war, had to chop its 2009
spending plans three times after global oil prices plunged from a peak last
summer of more than $147 per barrel.
The final version, which involves $58.6 billion in spending, was dependent on
average oil income of $50 per barrel and oil exports of 2 million barrels per
day.
Iraq's oil exports crept marginally higher to 1.905 million barrels per day
in May, and oil prices recently leaped to $70 per barrel.
Iraq earns less for its crude than world benchmark prices. On Monday, London
Brent crude was priced at $68 per barrel.
Holding out financial hope to cash-strapped provincial officials, Maliki said
local governments should make sure they spend their entire budgets in the
meantime to make sure citizens could see progress in the provision of essential
services.
"And God willing, improvements in oil prices and oil production and exports,
might allow us, God willing, to present another supplementary budget, which may
mean more money for the provinces," Maliki told a conference of regional
officials.
Iraq's budget woes have hit at a sensitive time.
The bloodshed unleashed by the 2003 U.S. invasion has begun to recede but
analysts warn violence could be stoked again by public frustration if the
economy does not grow and the provision of basic services like electricity and
water does not improve. (Reporting by Aseel Kami; Editing by Mike Peacock)
As oil prices rise, Iraq nurtures budget hopes - Source