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SAUDI
ECONOMY- AN OVERVIEW |
Performance
in 2003
The
Saudi economy continued to make significant progress during 2003. The
GDP maintained its upward trend (preliminary projections put it in
excess of 6%); price situation remained stable (0.5% as per preliminary
Govt. figures); private sector growth was slightly more than 4%. Total
oil revenues were the highest in the last two decades. Increased oil
output, combined with a strong oil price, lead to an increase in the
current-account surplus of SR 101.9 billion (US$ 27.2 billion) and a
sharp reduction in the fiscal deficit to SR 30 billion (US$ 8 billion).
Foreign assets stood in Oct. 2003 at US$ 56.7, an increase of US$ 14.9
billion from Dec 2002. Reliable estimates indicate that debt reduction
during the year was to the tune of US$ 5 billion. The combination of
large surplus, build-up of foreign assets and debt reduction,
cumulatively, represented an outstanding year in terms of fiscal
performance for the Saudi economy.
The
Saudi Arabian stock market index Tadawal All Share Index (TASI) recorded
one of the best performances among all global indices. Market
capitalization doubled during the year and TASI recorded a gain of over
75%.
A
series of economic decisions during the course of the year aimed at
spurring the Kingdom’s pursuit of accession to the WTO have fostered
greater open market private enterprise policies.
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A
major trade development was the implementation on 1st. January 2003 of the
Gulf Cooperation Council customs union whereby the six GCC (Saudi
Arabia, Oman, Kuwait, UAE, Bahrain, Qatar) countries have a common
tariff of 5 per cent on most imported goods that move freely throughout
the GCC after they enter at any one point of entry. However, while the
Customs Union is technically in place, several provisions including the
collection and distribution of tariffs between the six GCC member
countries, have been deferred. Nevertheless, the Kingdom (which is the
only non-WTO member of the GCC) already has lowered customs tariffs from
12 percent to a uniform 5 percent.
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With
the objective of restructuring the domestic capital market to operate on
more developed principles that would create effective instruments to
invest savings and further increase the depth of the market and create
new financing sources for investors, the Council of Ministers approved
the draft Capital Market Law on 16.6.2003.
The Saudi Cabinet also approved a new law to regulate the
insurance sector.
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Earlier,
with a view to raising efficiency of government organs, some
administrative restructuring of Ministries was also undertaken.
For giving the private sector a major role in the development,
management and operation of industrial estates, a Resolution approving
the statute of the Saudi Authority for Industrial Estates and Technology
Zones was issued.
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In
a further sign of opening up new sectors hitherto barred for foreign
investors, Deutsche Bank announced on 9 October 2003 that it plans to
start operations in Saudi Arabia after winning the first non-GCC banking
license in the kingdom for 23 years.
Other foreign banks who have already won licenses to open
branches in the Kingdom are: Abu Dhabi Bank, Kuwait Bank, and the Gulf
International Bank. Other
international banks are likely to follow suit.
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The
Supreme Tourism Authority unveiled a number of new procedures aimed at
developing tourism in the Kingdom. It has prepared a five-year work plan
covering the period 2003-2007 with the aim of implementing national
tourist projects and to attract capital to develop tourism.
Efforts are underway to develop 38 new tourist sites in addition to the
existing 175 sites in various parts of the Kingdom.
There
are plans to establish a new regional airport in Al-Ola near Madinah to
promote business and tourism in the region. The historical sites of
Madain Saleh are located in Al-Ola.
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The
Saudi Telecommunications Company completed successful partial
privatization in January 2003. The phased opening of the telecom sector
is aimed at encouraging private investment in networks and telecom
services immediately, mobile telephone services in 2004 and fixed lines
in 2008.
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The Kingdom
continued to encourage foreign investment in a manner, which will allow
it to absorb the benefits of modern technology and know how, while
preserving its proud religious and social traditions. Since its
establishment in 2000, the Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority (SAGIA)
has approved licenses for some 2000 projects worth over $12 billion,
although only a fraction of that figure has so far been translated into
actual investment. The
major investing countries in Saudi Arabia include the United States of
America, Japan, Britain, France, Germany, India, Sweden and Syria. There
is a very high level of liquidity in the Kingdom’s economy at present
to encourage new investment. SAGIA identified electricity, water,
communications, petrochemicals, gas, agriculture, railways, information
technology, tourism, education, minerals and infrastructure projects as
potential areas for new investments in the Kingdom.
Trends,
Prospects & Opportunities
Saudi
Arabia is an annual import market of around US$ 31.0 billion, which
represents a great challenge and promising opportunity. Consumers with
high disposable income characterize Saudi market.
In
addition to its indigenous wealth and central location in the Middle
East, the Kingdom is also strategically placed to take advantage of
worldwide trading opportunities, particularly in Asia, Africa and
Europe. Given that almost
three-quarters of Saudi Arabia’s population is less than 30 years old,
the Kingdom has become a prime market in the Middle East for a variety
of consumer products and imported goods, media and educational
materials, and services in the financial, health, IT, retail, leisure
and property sectors.
Saudis
are seeking now standalone investments in utilities, water and railway
sectors, which could run to hundreds of billions of dollars over many
years and are trying to convince foreign investors that it is safe
economically and politically to invest in the Kingdom.
The
establishment in 1998 of the Saudi Electricity Company paved the way for
the deregulation and privatization of power and water desalination
plants. A variety of
privatization programmes are planned: Independent Power Production (IPP),
Independent Water and Power Production (IWPP), Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT),
Build-Own-Operate (BOO), Build-Own, Operate and Transfer (BOOT),
Build-Lease, and Transfer (BLT) and Build-Lease (BL). Power generation,
transfer and distribution is open for foreign investment and in the
power sector alone it is estimated that in the next 15-20 yeas the
investment needed would be $100 billion.
Saudi Arabia is already the world’s largest producer of
desalinated water, with 30 combined water and power generation plants
existing at present. Investment
potential in water could be in the region of $1-$2 billion a year.