Saudi Tourism Minister: Kingdom to Provide 250,000 Jobs while Hosting Expo 2030

In a session entitled "Accelerated Progress in the Labor Market" at the Global Labor Market Conference, Al-Khateeb referred to the inauguration of the National Tourism Strategy in 2019. SPA
In a session entitled "Accelerated Progress in the Labor Market" at the Global Labor Market Conference, Al-Khateeb referred to the inauguration of the National Tourism Strategy in 2019. SPA
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Saudi Tourism Minister: Kingdom to Provide 250,000 Jobs while Hosting Expo 2030

In a session entitled "Accelerated Progress in the Labor Market" at the Global Labor Market Conference, Al-Khateeb referred to the inauguration of the National Tourism Strategy in 2019. SPA
In a session entitled "Accelerated Progress in the Labor Market" at the Global Labor Market Conference, Al-Khateeb referred to the inauguration of the National Tourism Strategy in 2019. SPA

Saudi Minister of Tourism Ahmed Al-Khateeb said Thursday the Kingdom will provide 250,000 jobs during its hosting of the Expo 2030 in Riyadh.

He stressed the importance of sustainable jobs that the Kingdom will provide, including 1,000 hotel rooms on the sidelines of the exhibition.

In a session entitled "Accelerated Progress in the Labor Market" at the Global Labor Market Conference, Al-Khateeb referred to the inauguration of the National Tourism Strategy in 2019, which will take the domestic product in this sector from 3% to 10% in 2030, which requires providing one million additional jobs by 2030.

The minister referred to the Kingdom's chairmanship of the Executive Council of the United Nations World Tourism Organization and its hosting of the forthcoming General Assembly of the council under three priorities: the sustainability of the planet and the environment; the assurance of suitable jobs for human beings, tourism growth, travel and double the number of services; and the importance of maintaining place in any tourist destination.

He explained that the world's population will reach 8.5 billion by 2030, noting that there is a digitization process for many services, including the labor market, especially in terms of trade and manufacturing that have been digitized since decades, which has had a negative impact on the labor market.

Al-Khateeb added that the travel and tourism sector represented 10% of the global labor market, and provided 330 million jobs in 2019 before the pandemic, and that airlines and hotels were the most affected sectors globally by losing 60 million jobs, saying: "We are back in the pre-pandemic according to figures by the United Nations World Tourism Organization, and the World Travel and Tourism Council, which is good."

He noted that the tourism sector globally provides 10% of jobs in the labor market, so it is an important sector for growth in the future, stressing the importance of maintaining the human component of the tourism sector as it plays an essential and central role in sharing the cultures from different countries that we travel to.



SAMA’s Reserve Assets Reach Highest Levels Since 2022

The Saudi capital, Riyadh (Reuters)
The Saudi capital, Riyadh (Reuters)
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SAMA’s Reserve Assets Reach Highest Levels Since 2022

The Saudi capital, Riyadh (Reuters)
The Saudi capital, Riyadh (Reuters)

The total reserve assets of the Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) increased by 5.5 percent in June on an annual basis, to reach SAR 1.754 trillion ($467.5 billion), compared to SAR 1.66 trillion ($442 billion) in the same period of last year, recording their highest levels since November of 2022.
According to SAMA’s monthly statistical bulletin, reserve assets increased slightly on a monthly basis from SAR 1.752 trillion ($467 billion) in May, to SAR 1.754 trillion ($467.5 billion).
The value of financial investments abroad grew by approximately 7 percent, compared to the same period of 2023, to reach SAR 1.01 trillion ($269 billion) after amounting to SAR 950.87 billion ($253 billion), increasing by 1 percent on a monthly basis.
In contrast, reserve position in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) decreased by 10.7 percent compared to June 2023, recording SAR 13.3 billion ($3.5 billion).
Saudi reserve assets include investments in foreign securities, foreign exchange, deposits abroad, reserves with the International Monetary Fund, special drawing rights, and monetary gold.