Khaleej Times

Saudi Arabia pledges big projects in 2017

- Marwa Rashad Reuters

riyadh — Saudi Arabia has promised to launch major developmen­t projects towards the end of 2017 to re-energise an economy which has been hit by austerity measures, industry sources told Reuters.

Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the kingdom’s top economic official, made the commitment at a recent meeting with a delegation representi­ng the Saudi private sector, the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said.

While they pledged support for Prince Mohammed’s economic reforms, which aim to rescue state finances and diversify the economy in an era of cheap oil, the representa­tives of the business associatio­ns complained that the private sector had been hit hard by cuts to state spending and subsidies. While Prince Mohammed has cut a $98 billion state budget deficit and put the kingdom on track towards eliminatin­g its deficit within several years, austerity has stifled the companies needed to create jobs for a growing population.

The private sector, which grew by just 0.1 per cent last year, “is now suffering from increasing operating costs and declining purchasing power among the people”, Ahmed bin Suleiman Al Rajhi, the head of the Riyadh Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said in a report on the meeting.

“In addition, the industry is starting to lose its competitiv­e edge because of the increasing cost of power and fuel as well as the rising cost of foreign workers.” The report did not give details of the developmen­t projects planned by Prince Mohammed, whose media team did not respond to a request for comment, although the government said in December it would provide $53 billion of incentives to the private sector over the next four years and establish a fund to enable capital investment­s.

Riyadh has also suspended the introducti­on of major new austerity steps in the first half of this year.

The report said that although the government had resumed paying its debts to the constructi­on sector in the past few months, some contractor­s remained unable to restart projects because banks had seized the money to cover loans.

The 10 businessme­n, who head the top business associatio­ns in the kingdom, told Prince Mohammed that only 17 per cent of listed companies saw their profits grow in 2016, while 46 per cent saw profits fall and 37 per cent suffered losses.

Analysts have told Reuters that corporate earnings may finally have bottomed out after falling for two years, although a sharp rebound is unlikely.

He also said the planned sale of shares in oil giant Saudi Aramco would boost growth, while investment­s in mining and car manufactur­ing would boost employment, the report said. —

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 ?? AFP ?? Analysts say Saudi corporate earnings may have bottomed out after falling for two years, but a sharp rebound is unlikely. —
AFP Analysts say Saudi corporate earnings may have bottomed out after falling for two years, but a sharp rebound is unlikely. —

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