The National - News

Saudi job creation strengthen­s as business activity stays robust on output boost

- Sarmad Khan

Business activity in Saudi Arabia’s non-oil private sector economy remained robust in March as output and new business continued to expand, further supporting employment growth in the kingdom at the end of the first quarter.

The reading for the Arab world’s largest economy on the Riyad Bank purchasing managers’ index hit 58.7 in March, slightly lower than 59.8 in February.

Although the index was down from the eight-year high achieved in February, it remained well above the neutral 50-mark that separates growth from contractio­n.

The reading signalled a marked improvemen­t in operating conditions, and one that was among the strongest recorded since early 2015.

“Business conditions remain ... positive at the end of the first quarter of 2023 as improving market conditions and increased developmen­t spending helped to boost demand in the non-oil private sector,” said Naif Al-Ghaith, chief economist at Riyad Bank.

“Both output and new orders have expanded sharply, adding pressure on capacity at non-oil companies. Therefore, staffing levels have risen across all sectors and the growth in employment was among the strongest seen in the past five years.”

Saudi Arabia’s economy grew by 5.5 per cent on an annual basis in the fourth quarter of last year, driven by a surge in the kingdom’s oil and non-oil sectors, according to government estimates.

Non-oil activities for the October-December period rose by 6.2 per cent while oil activities grew by 6.1 per cent and government services activities expanded by 2.9 per cent, the General Authority for Statistics (Gastat) said.

The kingdom’s gross domestic product exceeded $1 trillion for the first time last year as its economy grew by 8.7 per cent, according to data released by Gastat last week.

Non-oil activities increased by 5.4 per cent last year, the data showed.

The kingdom’s preliminar­y estimates for this year indicate a gross domestic product growth of 3.1 per cent. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund expects the Saudi economy to grow by 2.6 per cent this year and by 3.4 per cent next year.

Companies surveyed noted a sharp uplift in new business intakes in March, as improving market conditions and a rise in developmen­t spending helped to boost demand. Some businesses said a “relatively mild increase in output prices” also supported sales growth in March, while orders from foreign customers rose again at the end of the first quarter.

While the rate of overall new order growth softened from February, it was still the second-fastest in a year and a half.

A further rise in new business also supported a marked increase in output levels, which was marginally softer than February’s recent high. Input cost inflation faced by non-oil companies rose to a four-month high in March, driven by rising raw materials costs and wages.

“On the latter, efforts to compensate workers facing higher living costs meant that salaries rose to the greatest degree since September 2016,” the survey said.

Businesses polled also remained confident about the prospects of a rise in business activity over the next 12 months. The degree of optimism was unchanged from February and stronger than the trend registered over the past three years.

“Despite the global headwinds, including the recent credit crunch and heightened uncertaint­y, Saudi non-oil firms exhibited a robust degree of confidence towards future activity in March. Supportive government policies, along with improving demand levels, have been grounds for this optimism,” Mr Al-Ghaith said.

Meanwhile, business conditions in Egypt’s non-oil economy continued to weaken, with the S&P Global Egypt PMI reading falling to 46.7 in March, from 46.9 in February. Activity and new orders continued to contract last month as inflation and supply constraint­s drove sustained demand weakness.

Saudi Arabia’s gross domestic product exceeded $1 trillion last year as its economy grew by 8.7 per cent

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