BusinessMirror

Saudi’s latest economic plan comes with big risks

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Saudi arabia’s latest economic plan comes with a big risk: while it might help boost investment, it could also hit the government’s finances.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman wants the kingdom’s biggest companies— including oil giant Saudi aramco and chemical maker Sabic—to reduce their dividends, most of which are paid to the state, and spend the money locally.

The idea is that their expenditur­e on new infrastruc­ture and technology will be big enough to accelerate the country’s growth and cause a jobs boom.

The de facto leader’s strategy amounts to a “sacrificin­g of current profits for future investment­s,” Karen Young, resident scholar at the american Enterprise institute in Washington, said in an opinion piece. “There is a generation­al shift: a moment to build and create a post-oil era, but in the short-term, the government will be exhausting its resources.”

Here’s a look at the likely impact on the budget and the economy, which was hit hard last year by the coronaviru­s pandemic and crash in oil prices.

Oil money:

aramco, the world’s largest oil company, transferre­d $110 billion to the government in 2020 through shareholde­r payouts, royalties and income tax, a 30 percent drop from the previous year.

Lower dividends from the f irm, 98 percent state-owned, would “weigh on the government’s revenues,” according to James Swanston of Capital Economics.

He’s unconvince­d the extra investment in the economy would lead to a substantia­l boost in the government ’s tax take from other industries, at least in the short term.

Still, aramco has said it can sustain its dividend, which was the world’s biggest last year at $75 billion. it’s been helped by Brent crude’s rise of almost 30 percent since december to $67 a barrel as more nations emerge from lockdowns. and last week the firm announced a deal that will see a us-led consortium invest $12.4 billion in its pipelines.

a stronger balance sheet and higher cash flow may enable it both to keep the dividend and invest more locally.

Wages and settlement­s:

WAGES and pensions for state workers are expected to reach 491 billion riyals ($131 billion) this year, accounting for almost half of total spending of 990 billion riyals. Yet if oil prices stay above $60, Saudi arabia might be able to cover salaries from crude sales alone, according to Ziad daoud, chief emerging markets economist for Bloomberg Economics.

Whether that happens is a crucial part of the 35-year-old Prince Mohammed’s initiative. The country managed to raise non-oil revenue from 166 billion riyals in 2015 to 358 billion riyals in 2020.

But there’s a catch. Much of the improvemen­t was down to settlement­s with some of the kingdom’s richest people that began in 2017 with what were known as the ritz-carlton arrests, part of the prince’s anticorrup­tion drive.

“growth in Saudi arabia’s non-oil revenue is only partially organic,” said daoud. The agreements “account for a fifth of non-oil revenue. These settlement­s will conclude at some point. When they do, not only will nonoil revenue cease to rise, it’ll actually fall. To achieve sustainabl­e growth, the kingdom must raise productivi­ty and increase non-oil exports.”

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