Toronto Star

Virus casts shadows over Saudi Arabia’s year

Pandemic has forced a recalibrat­ion of plans to revamp the economy

- AYA BATRAWY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES— This was supposed to be Saudi Arabia’s year to shine as host of the prestigiou­s G20 gathering of world leaders. The event would have seen Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman share handshakes and wide smiles with presidents and prime ministers.

Instead, the gathering this November will likely be a virtual meet-up, stripping its host of the pomp that would have accompanie­d televised arrivals on Riyadh’s tarmac just two years after the killing of Saudi writer Jamal Khashoggi had cast a shadow over the crown prince, who U.S. intelligen­ce says bore responsibi­lity for the crime.

It was also to be another year of sweeping change for Saudi Arabia. The kingdom had only just begun to swing open its doors to tourists and eye-popping concerts when the pandemic struck, spawning social distancing and lockdowns.

“It’s unfortunat­e, but I think that some of the sectors that Saudi Arabia was most interested in going into are going to be hit hard,” said Bessma Momani, a professor of Middle East studies at the University of Waterloo in Ontario. “If you look at the investment that was being announced and part of the constructi­on effort, a lot of it included theatre venues, concert halls … That’s really under risk.”

With Saudi cities under curfew and the country’s borders shut, even the upcoming hajj pilgrimage in Mecca could be cancelled or dramatical­ly pared down. The hajj, which starts in late July this year, has not been cancelled in the 90 years since Saudi Arabia’s founding.

The hajj not only provides Saudi Arabia with immense influence and prestige among Muslims, it also generates around $6 billion (U.S.) in revenue for the government annually.

Since April, Mecca has been under a strict 24-hour curfew. The Grand Mosque there housing the cube-shaped Kaaba, Islam’s holiest site, is closed to the public, and the smaller, yearround umrah pilgrimage­s have been suspended.

The impact of the coronaviru­s and low oil prices have forced a recalibrat­ion of Prince Mohammed’s ambitious plans to revamp the oil-dependent economy, which is expected to contract three per cent this year.

Cuts of at least $8 billion are being made to the crown prince’s mega-projects, like a futuristic city in the desert called Neom and luxury tourism resorts along the Red Sea. Prince Mohammed hopes to transition the country away from oil, but in the short-term his plans rely on oil revenue, which have plummeted to below $40 a barrel. After producing a market-jolting level of 12 million barrels a day in April, Saudi Arabia is now producing just 9.3 million barrels a day as it leads major oil producers in an agreement to cut production.

Revenue from oil is expected to generate just $133 billion in 2020 for Saudi Arabia, down 34 per cent from last year and down 58 per cent from highs in 2013, according to research by Jadwa Investment.

The seismic blows have also curtailed the state’s largesse of subsidies and welfare for citizens. A monthly bonus for civil servants has been stopped and taxes on basic goods are tripling in July. A committee is being formed to review salaries in the public sector, where most Saudis are employed. That wage bill alone will cost the government $134 billion this year, half of all projected spending.

Despite the challenges, Saudi Arabia has relatively low debt and hefty financial reserves built-up during years of high oil prices. This has allowed the government to comfortabl­y provide free health care and hotel quarantine­s for anyone with the coronaviru­s, including those residing in the kingdom illegally.

Saudi Arabia has one of the highest rates of the coronaviru­s infection in the region, with the number of new daily cases reaching their highest level on Monday. The kingdom has confirmed more than132,000 cases of the virus, including 1,011 deaths.

As the pandemic hit businesses across the country, King Salman allocated $2.4 billion to cover 60 per cent of salaries for many Saudis in the private sector, where a $32-billion stimulus package was announced. Jadwa Investment estimates that up to 75 per cent of all Saudis who work in the private sector will have their salaries partially covered by the government during the pandemic.

To cover the budget deficit, Saudi Arabia has plowed into its net foreign assets, which have dwindled from nearly $740 billion in 2014 to less than $450 billion in April.

Some $40 billion in reserves were moved in March and April to the Saudi sovereign wealth fund to invest abroad as stock prices plunged.

The Public Investment Fund, which Prince Mohammed oversees, purchased $7.7 billion worth of stakes in companies, including Boeing, Disney, Marriott, Facebook and Starbucks, as well as U.S. banks Citigroup and Bank of America. The fund also bought shares in oil companies BP, Royal Dutch Shell and Total amid market volatility.

In other risky bets, the fund in April purchased an 8.2 per cent stake in cruise line company Carnival and a 5.7 per cent stake in Live Nation, the entertainm­ent company behind concerts for the world’s biggest stars. The deals are worth some $872 million and were welcomed by both companies.

It’s a turnaround from late 2018, when western businesses turned away from the crown prince and the fund following outcry over Khashoggi’s slaying and dismemberm­ent by Saudi government agents inside the kingdom’s consulate in Turkey.

“I think as time has gone on, more companies are taking their cue from their own government­s, which have continued to engage Saudi Arabia and have also looked to other steps the kingdom has tried to take to reform,” said Prem Kumar, who leads Albright Stonebridg­e Group’s Middle East strategy and commercial diplomacy division.

Domestical­ly, Jadwa Investment estimates that 1.2 million foreign workers, many of whom work in hospitalit­y, tourism, retail and constructi­on, will leave Saudi Arabia by the end of the year.

Momani, the Waterloo professor, said the expat exodus could provide a silver lining for women and young Saudis to fill some of those jobs.

Cuts of at least $8 billion are being made to the crown prince’s mega-projects

 ?? AMR NABIL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Saudi Arabia had only just begun to swing open its doors to tourists and eye-popping concerts when the pandemic struck.
AMR NABIL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Saudi Arabia had only just begun to swing open its doors to tourists and eye-popping concerts when the pandemic struck.

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