Monsha'at Reports 3.5% Quarterly Increase in SMEs Driven by Growth across Saudi Non-Oil Economy

Monsha'at released its latest quarterly SME Monitor, which showed a 3.5% growth in the number of SMEs in Saudi Arabia in Q3 2023, bringing their total number to 1.27 million.
Monsha'at released its latest quarterly SME Monitor, which showed a 3.5% growth in the number of SMEs in Saudi Arabia in Q3 2023, bringing their total number to 1.27 million.
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Monsha'at Reports 3.5% Quarterly Increase in SMEs Driven by Growth across Saudi Non-Oil Economy

Monsha'at released its latest quarterly SME Monitor, which showed a 3.5% growth in the number of SMEs in Saudi Arabia in Q3 2023, bringing their total number to 1.27 million.
Monsha'at released its latest quarterly SME Monitor, which showed a 3.5% growth in the number of SMEs in Saudi Arabia in Q3 2023, bringing their total number to 1.27 million.

The General Authority for Small and Medium Enterprises (Monsha'at) has released its latest quarterly SME Monitor, which showed a 3.5% growth in the number of SMEs in Saudi Arabia in Q3 2023, bringing their total number to 1.27 million.

With over 40,000 new businesses created across the country in Q3, the monitor indicated that 43.3% of SMEs are now located in the booming financial capital of Riyadh. The Saudi economy, driven by strong non-oil growth of 3.6% in Q3, is now expected to expand by 0.8% in 2023, according to the IMF, outpacing average G20 growth.

Highlighting trends across the broader Saudi economy, the latest monitor contained sections on the Kingdom's expanding manufacturing sector, which grew by 4.6% year-on-year in Q3 2023, according to the General Authority for Statistics (GASTAT).

With Saudi Arabia aiming to establish itself as a leading industrial and manufacturing hub, a series of large public initiatives driven in part by the National Industrial Development and Logistics Program (NIDLP) helped more SMEs enter these spaces in Q3 2023, the monitor added.

With over 11,000 factories now operating in the Kingdom, 136 new industrial licenses were issued by the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Sources alone in August 2023.

According to the monitor, SMEs have also shown considerable progress in Al-Qassim Province, particularly in mining and agriculture. With nearly 60,000 SMEs, Al-Qassim has 105 active mining licenses.

While its mining industry produces 4 million tons of bauxite each year, the only such source in the Middle East, the region's farmers produce 1.22 million tons of dates, lemons, oranges, grapes, and other agricultural products each year, giving credence to its nickname as the breadbasket of the Kingdom.

Throughout the quarter, SMEs also continued to benefit from a diverse range of innovative upskilling programs, as detailed in the monitor.

Monsha'at hosted five week-long upskilling events to help SMEs attract funding, expand their business, and enter the commercial franchise, healthcare, and legal sectors. Throughout Q3, more than 100,000 SMEs benefitted from one of Monsha'at's programs.

According to the monitor, the private sector continued to propel the Saudi economy in Q3 2023 due to these and other initiatives.

Buoyed by robust private sector investment in SMEs, which increased year-on-year by 18.8% in Q2 2023 to SAR262.7 billion ($70 billion), the Kingdom's non-oil growth is a symptom of a rapidly maturing ecosystem whose entrepreneurs are now driving Saudi Arabia's ambitious diversification targets.



Riyadh, Tokyo Seek to Expand Cooperation in Clean Energy Technology and Green Hydrogen

Construction work at Expo Osaka 2025 exhibition in Japan. Asharq Al-Awsat
Construction work at Expo Osaka 2025 exhibition in Japan. Asharq Al-Awsat
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Riyadh, Tokyo Seek to Expand Cooperation in Clean Energy Technology and Green Hydrogen

Construction work at Expo Osaka 2025 exhibition in Japan. Asharq Al-Awsat
Construction work at Expo Osaka 2025 exhibition in Japan. Asharq Al-Awsat

Tokyo has said it was willing to expand cooperation with Riyadh in areas such as new sensitive technologies, clean energy technology, green hydrogen and ammonia production, while working on a plan to increase trade with the Kingdom and deepen research and scientific cooperation.

Several departments in Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry told Asharq Al-Awsat that Japanese-Saudi dialogue on clean energy is ongoing, lauding the signing of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) in clean energy and clean ammonia in 2022, as well as an MoU on carbon recycling between the two countries.

The ministry told Asharq Al-Awsat that the objective is to achieve zero carbon by 2050 in Japan and by 2060 in Saudi Arabia. It said Saudi Arabia has natural resources in solar and wind energy, along with minerals that enable Japan to provide energy efficiency technology and materials, fostering integration between the two countries in the relevant fields.

It also said that Saudi Arabia is Japan's top destination for crude oil imports, accounting for 40%. The Japanese government will continue to cooperate in the energy sector, the ministry added. Additionally, the government is encouraging the private sector and Japanese companies to invest in the Kingdom, and expects to expand bilateral work in areas such as mining, clean energy, green hydrogen, and ammonia.

Professor Gento Mogi, Deputy Director of the Mohammed bin Salman Center for Future Sciences and Technology for Saudi-Japan Vision 2030 (MbSC2030) at the University of Tokyo, told Asharq Al-Awsat that the cooperation supported by the center goes beyond relying on trade, crude oil purchases, and technology products and cars. It includes training and development for human resources, academics, researchers, and scholarship students, with 16 projects involving 15 university professors.

According to Mogi, the University has dedicated part of its cooperation with institutions, centers, and academic institutes outside the university, and in Saudi Arabia, it is implementing a five-year initiative that will end in June 2025, with hopes of extending it for another five years.

Saudi-Japanese trade

The Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO) expects an increase in bilateral trade, indicating that Japan exported products worth $6.359 billion, including cars, technology, and electronics, while it imported from Saudi Arabia goods worth more than $34 billion, with 98% of that being crude oil.

JETRO revealed to Asharq Al-Awsat its plan to increase infrastructure products and establish smart cities to enhance cooperation between the two countries, saying Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 has opened broad opportunities for collaboration between the countries.

JETRO also said that it is working to meet a rising Saudi demand for Japanese products, as well as an increasing interest in Saudi products. Joint exhibitions between companies in both countries are working to boost trade and demand for Saudi-Japanese products, it added.

The operations department of the Expo Osaka 2025 exhibition confirmed that Saudi Arabia will have a strong participation in the exhibition.