Saudi unveils far-reaching plan to move away from oil

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Saudi unveils far-reaching plan to move away from oil

By AFP
Published: April 25, 2016
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Saudi Arabia's Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attends a cabinet meeting that agrees to implement a broad reform plan known as Vision 2030 in Riyadh, April 25, 2016. PHOTO: REUTERS

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia said Monday it would create the world’s largest wealth fund and sell shares in state energy giant Aramco as it unveiled a vast plan to transform its oil-dependent economy.
The announcement of the long-term reform programme, dubbed “Saudi Vision 2030″, marks the beginning of a hugely ambitious attempt to move Saudi Arabia beyond oil, the backbone of its economy for decades, amid a steep fall in prices.
The key architect of the diversification plan, deputy crown prince Mohammed bin Salman, said that if it works Saudi Arabia “can live without oil by 2020″.
In an interview with the Saudi-owned Al-Arabiya news channel after the government approved the programme, the 30-year-old prince outlined a series of measures aimed at reshaping his desert kingdom’s economy.


“We have all developed an oil addiction in Saudi Arabia and this is dangerous and has hampered development in many sectors during past years,” he said.
Mohammed said part of the plan is “to sell less than five percent of Aramco” in an Initial Public Offering (IPO), valuing the company at between $2 trillion and $2.5 trillion.
By “selling even one percent of Aramco, it will be the largest IPO in the world”, he said.
Part of the funds from the share sale, Mohammed said, will be used to set up a $2-trillion sovereign wealth fund, which would easily surpass Norway’s $865-billion fund as the world’s biggest.
SWFs are used commonly as investment arms for oil-dependent nations seeking to diversify revenue streams, and are among the world’s largest institutional investors.
With so much capital on its hands, the Saudi SWF would make Riyadh one of the single most important global investors.
It will be “by far the largest on the planet”, Mohammed said. “There will not be any investment or development in any region of the world without the Saudi sovereign wealth fund having a say.”
The fund will include current Saudi fiscal assets of around $600 billion, as well as returns from the sales of Aramco shares and state-owned real estate and industrial areas estimated to be worth $1 trillion, Mohammed said.


The reform programme was approved by the government during a special cabinet meeting chaired by Mohammed’s father King Salman, who urged Saudis to support the “ambitious plan”, the official SPA news agency reported.
It is also to include major structural reforms, privatisations and efforts to increase government efficiency, the prince said.
For decades Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest crude exporter and the largest economy in the Arab world, has enjoyed a huge windfall from its massive and easily exploitable oil reserves.
Flush with oil revenues, the nation has built up enormous fiscal reserves and provided its 28 million citizens with a generous system of public employment, welfare benefits and subsidised utilities.
But analysts have long warned that the Saudi system, which counts on oil for 70 percent of state revenues, is deeply bureaucratic and inefficient, leaving the economy vulnerable.
And the recent dramatic fall in oil prices — from more than $100 a barrel in early 2014 to around $40 a barrel this month — has underscored the dangers.
Riyadh posted a record budget deficit in 2015. With another $87-billion shortfall projected for this year, the government took the unprecedented step of raising retail fuel prices by up to 80 percent in December and cutting subsidies for electricity, water and other services.
Cracks have begun to appear in the tightly controlled kingdom, with increasing criticism on social media from Saudis concerned over the hit to their wallets.


On Saturday, King Salman sacked the water and electricity minister, Abdullah al-Hussayen, who had drawn criticism for his handling of price increases, including a suggestion that citizens upset over high water bills dig their own wells.
Saudi fiscal reserves also dropped to a four-year low last year, down from $732 billion in 2014 to $611.9 billion.
Still, Saudi Arabia’s reserves remain among the largest in the world, tempering any concerns about the economy’s short-term viability.
And the fall in oil prices is largely due to OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia’s own refusal to cut production as it seeks to drive less competitive players out of the market, in particular US shale producers.


http://tribune.com.pk/story/1091437/saudi-unveils-far-reaching-plan-to-move-away-from-oil/
 

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Saudi Prince Unveils Sweeping Plans To End ‘Addiction’ To Oil

“We will not allow our country ever to be at the mercy of commodity price volatility or external markets,” Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said.


04/25/2016 12:32 pm ET
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Samia Nakhoul, William Maclean and Marwa Rashad

RIYADH, April 25 (Reuters) - The powerful young prince overseeing Saudi Arabia’s economy unveiled ambitious plans on Monday aimed at ending the kingdom’s “addiction” to oil and transforming it into a global investment power.
Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said the world’s top oil exporter would raise the capital of its public investment fund to 7 trillion riyals ($2 trillion) from 600 billion riyals ($160 billion) and would sell up to five percent of shares in state oil giant Aramco.
The plans also included changes that would alter the social structure of the ultra-conservative Muslim kingdom by pushing for women to have a bigger economic role and by offering improved status to resident expatriates.
“We will not allow our country ever to be at the mercy of commodity price volatility or external markets,” Prince Mohammed said at his first news conference with international journalists, who were invited to a Riyadh palace for the event.
“We have developed a case of oil addiction in Saudi Arabia,” he had earlier told al-Arabiya television news channel.
His “Vision 2030” envisaged raising non-oil revenue to 600 billion riyals ($160 billion) by 2020 and 1 trillion riyals ($267 billion) by 2030 from 163.5 billion riyals ($43.6 billion) last year. But the plan gave few details on how this would be implemented, something that has bedeviled previous reforms.
The 31-year-old prince gave assured answers to questions on the plan, and appeared to pitch his comments to appeal across the Saudi social spectrum, and in particular to young people, who face unemployment and an economic downturn despite their country’s oil wealth.
Even before oil prices started to plunge in 2014, economists had regarded Riyadh’s fiscal policy and economic structure as being unsustainable, but reduced income from energy sales has made reform more urgent.
At the center of the plan is the restructuring of its Public Investment Fund (PIF), which Prince Mohammed said would become a hub for Saudi investment abroad, partly by raising money through selling shares in Aramco.

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Handout . / Reuters
Saudi Arabia’s Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attends a cabinet meeting that agrees to implement a broad reform plan known as Vision 2030 in Riyadh, April 25, 2016. OPENING ARAMCO ACCOUNTS

The partial privatization of Aramco was also central to the plans, and Prince Mohammed said it would be transformed into an energy company that he expected to be valued at $2 trillion to $3 trillion, and that less than 5 percent of it would be listed on the stock market.
So big is the state oil company because of its rights to the kingdom’s crude reserves, that selling even 1 percent of its value would create the biggest initial public offering (IPO) on earth, he said.
He said other Aramco subsidiary companies would also be listed along with other publicly held companies, and added that one major benefit of privatization was that it would increase transparency and help limit corruption.
“People used to be unhappy that files and data of Aramco are undeclared, unclear and not transparent. Today they will be transparent. If Aramco gets IPO-ed that means it has to announce its statements of accounts,” he said.
Since the prince was appointed to oversee Saudi long-term planning through the Council of Economic and Development Affairs, Riyadh’s focus on reform has grown far more urgent and far more acute.
Prince Mohammed has enjoyed a dizzyingly rapid rise since his father became king 15 months ago, from being little known outside the ruling Al Saud family to become the driving force of Saudi plans to prepare for a future after oil.
In his rare press conference, he presented himself as a modernizing leader who seeks to shake Saudi Arabia out of its economic slumber and its reputation for opacity and rigid bureaucracy, showing an interest in topics including education, the public role of women, and football.
The government ran a deficit of 367 billion riyals ($98 billion) or 15 per cent of gross domestic product in 2015, officials said, and this year’s budget plan aimed to cut that to 326 billion riyals ($87 billion).
His economic team has already announced efforts to curb wasteful government spending, to diversify revenue streams by introducing sales tax and privatizing state assets, and to make reforms in the education sector.
Such was the speculation among Saudis over the details of the plan that hashtags associated with it were the top two trending on Twitter on Monday in the country with the highest rate of social media use in the Middle East.
But ambitious targets, such as raising the private sector share in the economy to 60 percent from 40 percent, reducing unemployment to 7.6 percent from 11 percent and growing non-oil income to 1 trillion riyals ($267 billion) from 163 billion riyals ($44 billion) were not explained further.

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Handout . / Reuters

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef, Saudi King Salman, and Saudi Arabia’s Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman stand together after Saudi Arabia’s cabinet agrees to implement a broad reform plan known as Vision 2030 in Riyadh, April 25, 2016. PLANS

Some Saudis said they had hoped for more detail on crucial issues such as education reform. There were no further details of plans to increase revenue from tax or of any changes to the political structure of the absolute monarchy.
“For me as a Saudi, I am concerned by the education transformation plan,” said a Saudi entrepreneur. “If it is not at the top of the list, why not?”
However, the plan also envisaged increasing women’s participation in the workforce, something that has already grown quickly over the past five years, to 30 percent from 22 percent.
But he also said he did not believe Saudi society was ready to end its ban on women driving.
A green card system would also be launched within five years to enable expatriate Arabs and Muslims to live and work long-term in the country, Prince Mohammed said, in a major shift for the insular kingdom.
But the focus was on economic restructuring to help reduce oil dependence.
“I think by 2020, if oil stops we can survive,” Prince Mohammed said. “We need it, we need it, but I think in 2020 we can live without oil.”
Appealing to Saudi youth, he ended his news conference by promising them a new Saudi Arabia.
“The vision is not a dream, it’s a reality that will come true,” he said.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry...end-oil-addiction_us_571e44a4e4b0d912d5ff36df
 

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