The National - News

SAUDI ARABIA STILL SET ON ACHIEVING ITS ‘GRAND VISION’ OF DIVERSIFIC­ATION

Executives from around the world will meet this week in the kingdom for an investment summit

- THE NATIONAL

One year on since Saudi Arabia courted movers and shakers from across the business world, the kingdom is pressing on with diversifyi­ng its economy.

There was palpable excitement at the inaugural Future Investment Initiative last year as executives from the finance and technology industries from across the world descended on Riyadh, eager to play a role in the evolution of the country as it opens up the economy and slates some of the state’s crown jewels for privatisat­ion.

The kingdom’s Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman courted investors with Neom, a $500 billion (Dh1.8 trillion) futuristic economic zone, and invited them to contribute their bit in the drive that is heralding the biggest social and economic change the Arab world has ever seen.

Despite some executives and partnering entities withdrawin­g from this year’s event over the death of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Turkey, the three-day event from Tuesday to Thursday is set to attract prominent global executives. Chiefs of certain western banks and corporates may not be attending, but they cannot afford to sever relations with the largest economy in the Arab world as it pursues diversific­ation to wean itself off oil income. Many companies will be sending senior executives to represent them.

Top executives from Asia including Japan’s SoftBank, South Korea’s Samsung, Citigroup, Raytheon, Mubadala, Investcorp, McKinsey, Roland Berger, Oliver Wyman, Glencore, and France’s Total are among those slated to attend. The Russian Direct Investment Fund said it strongly supported transforma­tive and historical reforms in Saudi Arabia undertaken by its leadership and will along with its partners “continue close investment co-operation” with the kingdom. Relations between Moscow and Riyadh have strengthen­ed over the past two years as a result of closer co-operation between the two oil producers.

Executives from Saudi Aramco, Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority, the kingdom’s sovereign investment vehicle the Public Investment Fund, the Saudi Stock Exchange, Neom, and the country’s Economy Minister Mohammed Al Tuwaijri will feature on different panels during the three-day event.

The fallout from the death of Khashoggi aside, its business as usual in the kingdom. That largely is a testament to what has been achieved in the kingdom since the 2017 gathering. FII, the brainchild of the kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund, is all set to build on the success of last year’s event, which brought together participan­ts from more than 90 countries.

“Davos in the Desert”, as the event is dubbed, has more than 150 speakers from 140 different organisati­ons and 17 global partner entities. The message is clear: Opec’s top oil exporter is pressing ahead with its reform agenda with an emphasis on building a knowledge-based economy and developing the country’s non-oil sector, whose revenue it aims to boost to 1 trillion Saudi riyals (Dh979bn) by 2030, from 163bn riyals.

“This is one of the largest social and political transforma­tions being undertaken anywhere in the world,” said Fahd Iqbal, head of Middle East research at Credit Suisse. “What we are encouraged by is the fact that the economy is moving in the right direction, particular­ly since the path it was on previously was not long-term sustainabl­e.”

The discussion­s will focus on a myriad topics that range from: the value and developmen­t of human capital; how the shifting geography of investment will change the future of innovation; how the convergenc­e of money and data changes global commerce; and how technology and globalisat­ion is impacting the business of entertainm­ent. Most importantl­y, business leaders and government officials will discuss what economic models of privatisat­ion the kingdom can present to bring foreign direct investment to an economy where oil still accounts for about 90 per cent of state revenues.

“The time now is to cement a lot of the ideas that have been discussed over the past year,” said Ramzi Khadra, chairman of MetLife in Saudi Arabia.

Some observers say the government as part of its grand makeover of the economy has invested too much time and energy in improving the hardware of its economic infrastruc­ture. “There is no magic wand [for an economic overhaul], there are so many [low] hanging fruit in terms of investing in education and building the next generation of Saudis,” Mr Abu Khadra, said. “Too much has been invested in hardware, we need to do more on having the right software in place.”

Ali Shihabi, a former chairman of private equity firm Rasmala and founder of the Arabia Foundation in Washington DC agrees. “The job skills issue and domestic education are a well-known problem which will take years to solve,” he said. “In

the meantime, the scholarshi­p abroad programme helps fill that gap.”

The kingdom educates more than 90,000 Saudis abroad in the United States, Europe and Asia. However, since last year’s FII, the kingdom has gone through a sea-change on both economic and social fronts. Saudi women secured the right to drive cars, attend football matches in stadiums and take part in public concerts.

The General Entertainm­ent Authority in the kingdom, set up in 2016, is attracting investment into tourism and entertainm­ent industries to help diversify the economy. The authority plans to host 5,000 concerts and festivals this year alone and will invest more than $64bn in the entertainm­ent sector over the next 10 years.

Riyadh wants to capture up to a quarter of the $20bn spent overseas every year by Saudis seeking entertainm­ent.

Cinemas, have opened doors to avid local movie watchers after a ban of three decades and a 334-square kilometre Qiddiya entertainm­ent city, which will also include a safari park, is being built to catapult Riyadh into the list of top 100 cities boasting the best quality of life in the world.

In the kingdom’s west coast, where Neom is slowly rising from the ground, PIF is launching an ultra-luxury project for internatio­nal tourists called Amaala. The fund’s other project on the Red Sea coast includes a nature reserve and heritage sites spread across 50 islands.

When oil prices slumped from the peak of $115 per barrel in mid-2014 to less than $30 per barrel in the first quarter of 2016, Saudi Arabia was swift in taking actions to bring about fiscal stability. Energy reforms, cutting subsidies, reducing the country’s inflated public servant wage bill, creating jobs, privatisin­g state-controlled assets and increasing the private sector contributi­on to the GDP underpinne­d the crown prince’s grand vision for the economy.

The economic policies worked, and worked to an extent that the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund in May had to warn the kingdom not to tighten fiscal policy too fast, as rapid bridging of the government’s budget deficit could damage the economy. Riyadh plans to balance its budget, which touched about $80bn last year, by 2020 through cuts to spending and energy subsidies, as well as sharp increases in fees and taxes.

The recovery of oil prices, now surging past $80 a barrel in recent weeks, have also helped augment government policies.

“I see a lot of progress with the restructur­ing of subsidies and reduction of the deficit,” said Mr Shihabi. “I hear many who say it is too fast and I prefer too fast rather than too slow,” he said.

Mr Iqbal of Credit Suisse said actions taken thus far – subsidy reform and moves towards social liberalisa­tion – have been a positive surprise for most Saudi observers.

However, the long-term success of the transforma­tion plan lies in the extent to which the private sector – which accounts for about 40 per cent of the country’s GDP – grows.

“We would, therefore, be looking towards signs of expansion in the private sector itself, for instance the split in GDP, employment numbers, wage growth and credit growth,” he said.

Riyadh expects the economy to expand 2.1 per cent in 2018 and 2.3 per cent in 2019. The IMF forecasts growth of 2.2 per cent and 2.4 per cent in the respective years.

Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank’s chief economist Monica Malik, said the government projection­s for this year are in line with those of the bank’s but the growth forecast for 2019 is “conservati­ve” and ADCB has put it at 2.7 per cent, bolstered by strong oil sector growth.

The government, is still firmly committed to its privatisat­ion agenda, the Crown prince told Bloomberg earlier this month, pledging the privatisat­ion of more than 20 companies at the start of next year.

Riyadh is also prioritisi­ng the merger of its oil interests ahead of the anticipate­d public flotation of Aramco, billed to be the biggest-ever in the world.

Neom and the futuristic vision of the crown prince were the highlights of last year’s event. Knowing his eagerness to present the kingdom as a major frontier of investment for global investors, one should not discount additional awe-inspiring announceme­nts this year.

Davos in the desert, as the event is dubbed, has more than 150 speakers from 140 organisati­ons and 17 global entities

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 ?? Reuters ?? The threeday event in Riyadh runs from Tuesday to Thursday
Reuters The threeday event in Riyadh runs from Tuesday to Thursday
 ??  ?? Saudis gather at a cinema
Saudis gather at a cinema

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