Saudi IPI Records Highest Growth in 3 Years

A general view of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (Reuters)
A general view of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (Reuters)
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Saudi IPI Records Highest Growth in 3 Years

A general view of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (Reuters)
A general view of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (Reuters)

The Saudi Industrial Production Index (IPI) recorded its highest growth in three years, reaching 11.1 percent last January on an annual basis, according to official data.

The General Authority for Statistics indicated that the increase in the annual growth rate is a clear indication of the recovery of industrial production in the country.

The increase of industrial production resulted mainly from higher output in the three sub-sectors, mining and quarrying, manufacturing, and electricity and gas supply.

Taking a longer-term view, the growth of the IPI turned positive in May 2021 after a long period of negative growth rates in 2019 and 2020, partly impacted by the effects of the worldwide pandemic.

Since mid-2021, the IPI growth showed a positive trend, accelerating at the end of 2021.

In January 2022, mining and quarrying grew by 11.4 percent compared to January 2021 as Saudi Arabia increased its oil production to its highest level by more than 10 million barrels per day in January 2022.

Manufacturing grew by 9.7 percent, and electricity and gas supplies by 15.7 percent.

Meanwhile, Saudi Central Bank (SAMA) extended the Guaranteed Financing Program - one of SAMA's Private Sector Financing Support Programs - for one more year until March 14, 2023, for micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs)

The extensions are consistent with SAMA's mandate of promoting financial sector stability, supporting economic growth, enhancing the Saudi Central Bank's support to MSMEs growth, and overcoming challenges from COVID-19 preventive measures.

MSMEs can benefit from the Guaranteed Financing Program through banks and financing companies that are subject to the supervision of the Saudi Central Bank and are members of the Small & Medium Enterprises Funding Guarantee Program "Kafalah."

Since its launch on March 14, 2020, the Program has benefited more than 13,000 contracts with a total financing value exceeding $2.9 billion.



Türkiye Says Aims to Rein in Tax Breaks, Target Avoidance in Reform Plan

A woman takes pictures as a ferry sails on the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Türkiye, 29 June 2024. EPA/ERDEM SAHIN
A woman takes pictures as a ferry sails on the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Türkiye, 29 June 2024. EPA/ERDEM SAHIN
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Türkiye Says Aims to Rein in Tax Breaks, Target Avoidance in Reform Plan

A woman takes pictures as a ferry sails on the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Türkiye, 29 June 2024. EPA/ERDEM SAHIN
A woman takes pictures as a ferry sails on the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Türkiye, 29 June 2024. EPA/ERDEM SAHIN

A drive by Türkiye 's government to modernize the country's tax system will seek to boost revenue by tackling tax avoidance and scrapping incentives that are no longer needed rather than raising the overall burden, the finance minister said on Monday.

Mehmet Simsek said, however, that preliminary draft proposals being discussed within the government envisioned a minimum 15% corporate tax on multinational companies, confirming a report last month by state-owned Anadolu Agency.

According to Reuters, he did not give further details about the proposal. At present, multinational companies face varying levies depending on numerous factors.

Speaking to local broadcaster BloombergHT, Simsek said the government's plans - which would need to be approved by parliament - also included raising the corporate tax on public-private partnerships (PPPs) to 30% from 25% at present.

Simsek, who has spearheaded a year-long policy-tightening program to tackle soaring inflation, said in Monday's interview that the tax plan being discussed by government officials was in the early stages and could be subject to changes before being presented to parliament.

He said there were no plans to introduce a transaction tax on the purchase and sale of stocks, but the government could propose taxes on stock market gains sometime in the future.

Earlier this month, an economy official said Türkiye had almost finalized work on imposing a transaction tax on the purchase and sale of stocks and crypto assets.
The plans are part of broader efforts to boost government savings, fiscal discipline and price stability after years of turmoil that fueled soaring inflation.

As part of the tightening program, the central bank has aggressively hiked interest rates to 50% from 8.5% since June last year. Annual inflation hit 75% in May but was expected to have dipped in June.