Oil Nations Scramble to Avert Economic Crisis After Prices Crash

ByTsvetana Paraskova– Apr 11, 2025, 6:38 AM CDT

oilimage

The April market rout, which crashed oil prices into the low $60s per barrel, is creating additional fiscal challenges to petrostates and oil-producing countries heavily dependent on oil revenues, on top of any tariff-related hardships.

As Brent Crude prices sank to $63 per barrel, major producers in the Gulf region, as well as Brazil and Nigeria, are looking to contain the fallout from the price plunge. Russia’s central bank has already signaled that the oil price decline could hit its economy hard.

‘;
document.write(write_html);
}

Oil at $60 is about $20 to $30 per barrel lower than what many major oil exporters in the Gulf need to balance their budgets. For Saudi Arabia, the world’s top crude oil exporter, its budget breakeven price is $91 per barrel, as estimated by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

With prices much lower than the breakeven price, Saudi Arabia may have to accelerate government borrowing and slow or delay spending on its ambitious futuristic megalomaniac projects.

Another major Gulf oil producer, Kuwait, last month approved a financing and liquidity law that will allow OPEC’s fourth-largest producer to return to the debt market after eight years.

Kuwait’s economy remains in recession due to OPEC+ production cuts, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said in December 2024, adding that the economy is “highly exposed” to commodity price volatility and a global growth slowdown.

The price crash of the past week isn’t helping at all.

“The oil price drop we’ve seen over the last week has taken us into territory where for a lot of oil-dependent economies, it’s not going to be what they need to balance their budgets, nowhere close,” Richard Bronze, head of geopolitics at Energy Aspects, told Reuters this week.

For Russia, the oil market meltdown in recent days could pose risks to the economy, Russia’s Central Bank Governor Elvira Nabiullina said earlier this week.

“If the escalation of the tariff wars continues, this usually leads to a decline in global trade and the global economy and, possibly, demand for our energy resources. Therefore, there are risks here,” Nabiullina was quoted as saying by Russia’s TASS news agency.

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

Join the discussion | Back to homepage

 

  • Related Posts

    Baghdad Hosting EU Energy Talks After Iraq Floats OPEC Exit

    European officials are expected to visit Baghdad in the coming weeks for high-level talks on energy cooperation, just hours after Iraq warned it could leave OPEC unless the producer group…

    Saudi Arabia Set to Slash Oil Prices as Hormuz Reopens

    Saudi Arabia is expected to slash the official selling prices of its crude loading for Asia in August, as Middle East’s crude benchmarks crashed amid the tentative reopening of the…

    Have You Seen?

    Oil Prices Dive as More Tankers Move Through Strait of Hormuz

    • June 27, 2026
    Oil Prices Dive as More Tankers Move Through Strait of Hormuz

    AMERICAN ENERGY SNAPSHOT: America’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve

    • June 27, 2026
    AMERICAN ENERGY SNAPSHOT: America’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve

    Magnolia Oil & Gas Is in Lead to Acquire WildFire for Over $4 Billion

    • June 27, 2026
    Magnolia Oil & Gas Is in Lead to Acquire WildFire for Over $4 Billion

    US Natural Gas Drops on Cooler Outlooks as July Contract Expires

    • June 27, 2026
    US Natural Gas Drops on Cooler Outlooks as July Contract Expires

    US Energy Firms Add Most Rigs in a Week Since June 2022, Baker Hughes Says

    • June 26, 2026
    US Energy Firms Add Most Rigs in a Week Since June 2022, Baker Hughes Says

    Chevron Eyes More Deals to Power US Data Centers

    • June 26, 2026
    Chevron Eyes More Deals to Power US Data Centers

    US Diesel Refining Economics Remain Firm Despite Iran War Truce

    • June 26, 2026
    US Diesel Refining Economics Remain Firm Despite Iran War Truce

    US Refining Capacity Fell by 263,000 Barrels Per Day in 2025, Says EIA

    • June 26, 2026
    US Refining Capacity Fell by 263,000 Barrels Per Day in 2025, Says EIA

    Qatar Offers First Crude Loadings to Buyers Since War Began

    • June 26, 2026
    Qatar Offers First Crude Loadings to Buyers Since War Began

    China’s Crude Imports Set to Hit Weakest Level Since 2016

    • June 26, 2026
    China’s Crude Imports Set to Hit Weakest Level Since 2016