Iraq Says Looks Forward to Joint Industrial, Commercial Zone with Kuwait

Kuwaiti Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Khaled Al Sabah received his Iraqi counterpart Mustafa Al-Kadhimi in Kuwait on Sunday (AFP)
Kuwaiti Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Khaled Al Sabah received his Iraqi counterpart Mustafa Al-Kadhimi in Kuwait on Sunday (AFP)
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Iraq Says Looks Forward to Joint Industrial, Commercial Zone with Kuwait

Kuwaiti Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Khaled Al Sabah received his Iraqi counterpart Mustafa Al-Kadhimi in Kuwait on Sunday (AFP)
Kuwaiti Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Khaled Al Sabah received his Iraqi counterpart Mustafa Al-Kadhimi in Kuwait on Sunday (AFP)

Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi stated that Iraq was looking forward to establishing a joint industrial and commercial zone with Kuwait to further develop an economic partnership between the two countries.

Kadhimi’s comments came during a meeting with Chairman of the Kuwait Chamber of Commerce and Industry Muhammad Jassim Al-Saqer and a large group of businessmen on the sidelines of his visit to Kuwait.

“Iraq is seriously seeking to facilitate the procedures for intra-regional trade with Kuwait, and to raise the volume of trade exchange, which is still below the level of our ambitions,” he stated.

Kadhimi stressed that the Iraqi government has worked to facilitate investment procedures, protect the rights of investors, provide all forms of support for the success of their business, and simplify granting entry visas to Kuwaiti businessmen, noting that Iraq had previously signed an agreement to avoid double taxation with Kuwait in 2019.

“Iraqi-Kuwaiti cooperation in the fields of oil and energy is of great interest to us, and we look forward to developing these relations by encouraging the Kuwaiti side to expedite the implementation of the related Gulf electrical interconnection projects,” he added.

In a separate context, Dr. Mazhar Mohammad Salih, a financial advisor to the Iraqi government, said on Monday that extensive meetings were being held to prepare the draft federal general budget for 2022.

Saleh told the German News Agency that the budget seeks to revive economic growth, reform the financial system, and maximize non-oil revenues, along with oil revenues.

He added that the significant improvement in crude oil prices has resulted in financial revenues that exceeded the USD 45 price ceiling approved by the current year’s budget, and thus the rise in oil prices contributed to filling a large part of the planned budget deficit of 29 trillion Iraqi dinars and stopped resorting to borrowing.



SAMA’s Reserve Assets Rise to $467.7 Billion

The headquarters of SAMA (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The headquarters of SAMA (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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SAMA’s Reserve Assets Rise to $467.7 Billion

The headquarters of SAMA (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The headquarters of SAMA (Asharq Al-Awsat)

The Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) reported an annual growth rate of 5.5 percent in its reserve assets, with an increase of approximately SAR 92.049 billion ($24.5 billion).
The growth brought the total reserve assets to SAR 1.754 trillion ($467.7 billion) by the end of the second quarter of the current year, compared to SAR 1.662 trillion ($443.2 billion) during the same period last year.
According to the Saudi Central Bank’s latest monthly statistical bulletin, reserve assets reached their highest levels at the end of June. On a quarterly basis, reserve assets grew by 2.7 percent, an increase of approximately SAR 46.724 billion, compared to the first quarter, which stood at SAR 1.707 trillion. On a monthly basis, the reserve assets grew by 0.1 percent, with an increase of about SAR 1.146 billion.
Reserve assets have seen a 6.6 percent increase from the beginning of the year until the end of June.
Reserve assets are composed of five main components. The largest of these is "Investments in Securities Abroad," which constitutes approximately 58 percent of the total, amounting to around SAR 1.016 trillion at the end of the second quarter of 2024.
The second largest component is "Foreign Exchange and Deposits Abroad," which represents about 37 percent of the total, amounting to approximately SAR 646.3 billion.
The third component, "Special Drawing Rights," accounts for around 4 percent of the total, amounting to SAR 77.2 billion.
The fourth item is the "Reserve Position with the International Monetary Fund," which totals SAR 13.3 billion.
Finally, "Monetary Gold" makes up the fifth component, with a value of approximately SAR 1.624 billion.