Saudi Arabia Increases Efficiency of Legal Environment for Business Sector by Applying Int’l Practices

Photo of the workshop recently held by the Saudi Bar Association and the Riyadh Region Bar Committee (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Photo of the workshop recently held by the Saudi Bar Association and the Riyadh Region Bar Committee (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Saudi Arabia Increases Efficiency of Legal Environment for Business Sector by Applying Int’l Practices

Photo of the workshop recently held by the Saudi Bar Association and the Riyadh Region Bar Committee (Asharq Al-Awsat)
Photo of the workshop recently held by the Saudi Bar Association and the Riyadh Region Bar Committee (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Saudi Arabia is developing a diverse business environment by expanding the application of legal concepts in a way that aligns with the goals of Vision 2030.
The new laws adopted by the Kingdom kept pace with the requirements of global and local investors, by enhancing the speed, efficiency and transparency of the legal and economic system, based on the latest global practices in the business sector.
Exceptional standards
Legal Expert Mohammed Al-Aqeel, managing partner of the Mohamed Al-Aqeel & Partners Law Firm, stressed the importance for experts in the legal and economic fields to observe the rapid evolution taking place in Saudi Arabia to achieve Vision 2030, through exceptional standards and the successful integration of international companies in the local market.
“From this standpoint, it is important to shed light on the legislation that specifically affects the Saudi market and legal practices, which are common legal trends that cannot be neglected today even though their definition was different in the recent past,” he stated.
Global practices
The Saudi expert added that global practices were a common legal language that is founded on legal norms.
The managing partner of Mohammed Al-Aqeel & Partners Law Firm pointed out that the system of the Red Flag & Yellow Flag, is the model that is used in the Saudi market, even among local companies, because it achieves the standard of transparency and disclaimer of responsibility in deals and contracts.
Al-Aqeel was speaking during a lecture held by the Saudi Bar Association and the Riyadh Region Bar Committee entitled, “Due-Learning Examination in Mergers and Acquisitions Contracts,” which presented the concept of this type of application to a number of legal practitioners.
Al-Aqeel touched on the entry of international companies through their brands into the Saudi market, through a commercial franchise agreement for restaurants, or a licensing agreement for global electronic applications for delivery companies, based on the rights to use a registered intellectual property or registered trademark.
“The image has recently been seen changing in the local market with the possibility of using these agreements between Saudi companies to participate in expansion and the acceptance of the idea of joint contribution by multiple parties for one brand,” he said.

 



Türkiye's Central Bank Lowers Key Interest Rate to 47.5%

A girl sells plastic items to people in the Kadikoy district in Istanbul, Türkiye, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2024. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)
A girl sells plastic items to people in the Kadikoy district in Istanbul, Türkiye, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2024. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)
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Türkiye's Central Bank Lowers Key Interest Rate to 47.5%

A girl sells plastic items to people in the Kadikoy district in Istanbul, Türkiye, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2024. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)
A girl sells plastic items to people in the Kadikoy district in Istanbul, Türkiye, Saturday, Dec. 7, 2024. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)

Türkiye’s central bank lowered its key interest rate by 2.5 percentage points to 47.5% on Thursday, carrying out its first rate cut in nearly two years as it tries to control soaring inflation.
Citing slowing inflation, the bank’s Monetary Policy Committee said it was reducing its one-week repo rate to 47.5% from the current 50%.
The committee said in a statement that the overall inflation trend was “flat” in November and that indicators suggest it is likely to decline in December, The Associated Press reported.

Demand within the country was slowing, helping to reduce inflation, it said.
Inflation in Türkiye surged in recent years due to declining foreign reserves and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s unconventional economic policy of lowering rates as a way to tame inflation — which he later abandoned.
Inflation stood at 47% in November, after having peaked at 85% in late 2022, although independent economists say the real rate is much higher than the official figures.

Most economists argue that higher interest rates help control inflation, but the Turkish leader had fired central bank governors for failing to fall in line with his previous rate-cutting policies.

Following a return to more conventional policies under a new economic team, the central bank raised interest rates from 8.5% to 50% between May 2023 and March 2024. The bank had kept rates steady at 50% until Thursday's rate cut.
The high inflation has left many households struggling to afford basic goods, such as food and housing.