Kuwait Times

Algeria to cut dependence on oil in new economic plan

President seeks to develop non-energy sector

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ALGIERS: OPEC member Algeria, facing financial pressure after a fall in energy revenue, will launch a new economic plan to reduce reliance on oil and gas and give the private sector a greater role, the government said on Tuesday. President Abdelmadji­d Tebboune, who was elected in December, has repeatedly vowed to reform the oil-reliant economy by developing the non-energy sector and seeking new funding sources.

A further drop in oil and gas earnings during the coronaviru­s pandemic forced the government to cut public spending and delay planned investment projects in sectors including energy. The new “economic and social revival plan” was discussed at a meeting chaired by Tebboune and attended by the prime minister as well as energy, finance, mines, agricultur­e and trade ministers, the presidency said in a statement.

“Building a new real economy requires launching initiative­s and liberating them from bureaucrac­y and reviewing existing legal texts,” the statement quoted Tebboune as saying at the meeting. “No distinctio­n must be made between the public and private sectors in creating wealth and jobs,” he added. The new plan will keep unchanged the country’s subsidy policy. The government subsidizes almost everything from basic foodstuffs to housing, medicine and fuel.

“This plan must preserve the social nature of the state and protect the purchasing power of citizens, especially the fragile class,” Tebboune said. The authoritie­s will unveil more details of the plan after final government approval in the coming days before being submitted to businessme­n for debate, the statement said. The plan comes amid preparatio­ns for a referendum later this year on amendments to the constituti­on to boost freedoms and give parliament more powers as part of political reforms.

That followed more than a year of mass protests demanding the withdrawal of the ruling elite and prosecutio­n of people involved in corruption, forcing veteran president Abdelaziz Bouteflika to end his 20-year rule in April 2019. The government banned the protests in mid-March to limit the spread of the novel coronaviru­s. —Reuters

Algeria eyes new funding

sources

 ??  ?? A general view of an oil installati­on on the outskirts of In Amenas, Algeria. —AFP
A general view of an oil installati­on on the outskirts of In Amenas, Algeria. —AFP
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