The National - News

ECONOMY OF SAUDI ARABIA SHRANK IN 2023 ON OIL SECTOR DIP

▶ Non-oil sector expanded 4.4% last year in Arab world’s largest economy

- JOHN BENNY

Saudi Arabia’s economy, the largest in the Arab world, contracted by 0.8 per cent annually last year, mainly due to a sharp decline in the oil sector, although the non-oil sector expanded by 4.4 per cent.

The oil sector recorded a 9 per cent drop in 2023, while the government sector grew 2.1 per cent, the General Authority for Statistics said.

Most economic activities expanded last year, with social and personal services recording the sharpest expansion at 10.8 per cent, followed by transport, storage, and communicat­ions at 7.3 per cent, the Gastat data showed.

Wholesale and retail trade, restaurant­s, and hotels climbed 7 per cent, while financial, insurance and business services expanded 6.8 per cent. Mining and quarrying activities increased 5.7 per cent.

But crude petroleum and natural gas activities decreased 9.4 per cent, and petroleum refining activities fell 7.4 per cent.

Last year, the kingdom’s GDP at current prices exceeded 4 trillion Saudi riyals ($1.06 trillion), according to Gastat.

Crude petroleum and natural gas activities contribute­d 25.4 per cent to the total, followed by government services (15.7 per cent), wholesale and retail trade, restaurant­s and hotels (9.7 per cent), manufactur­ing excluding petroleum refining (8.8 per cent), petroleum refining activities (6 per cent) and real estate (5.9 per cent).

Net taxes on products contribute­d 5.4 per cent to the kingdom’s gross domestic product, the Gastat report said.

A decrease in net exports of 6.5 per cent affected GDP growth, while imports expanded 9.9 per cent during the year, Gastat said. Brent crude, the benchmark for two thirds of the world’s oil, fell by about 10 per cent in 2023 on higher-than-expected supply from non-Opec countries and concerns about crude demand.

Saudi Arabia, along with other members of the Opec+ alliance, has been reducing crude output as part of efforts to “balance the market”.

This month, the kingdom, the world’s biggest oil exporter and Opec’s largest producer, said it will extend its voluntary cut of one million barrels per day through to the end of the second quarter of 2024.

The production cap is in addition to the voluntary cut of 500,000 bpd announced by the kingdom in April 2023, which will remain in effect until the end of December.

Saudi Arabia, which is implementi­ng its Vision 2030 diversific­ation agenda, has unveiled a series of initiative­s and policy reforms to reduce its dependence on oil, broaden its non-oil economic base and support domestic industries and job growth.

Business activity in the nonoil private sector economy of Saudi Arabia expanded at a brisk pace in February.

The seasonally adjusted Riyad Bank purchasing managers’ index – a key gauge of the kingdom’s non-oil economy – rose to 57.2 in February, from 55.4 in January, staying well above the neutral 50 mark that separates a growth from a contractio­n.

The kingdom’s economy is projected to expand 2.7 per cent this year and 5.5 per cent in 2025, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

In the fourth quarter of 2023, Saudi Arabia’s GDP contracted 4.3 per cent annually. While non-oil activities rose 4.2 per cent and government activities expanded 3.1 per cent, oil activities fell 16.2 per cent, the report found.

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