IMF: Private Sector Investments Will Drive Saudi Economic Growth

Saudi Arabia is seeking to strengthen its economic capabilities by reducing dependence on oil. (AFP)
Saudi Arabia is seeking to strengthen its economic capabilities by reducing dependence on oil. (AFP)
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IMF: Private Sector Investments Will Drive Saudi Economic Growth

Saudi Arabia is seeking to strengthen its economic capabilities by reducing dependence on oil. (AFP)
Saudi Arabia is seeking to strengthen its economic capabilities by reducing dependence on oil. (AFP)

Saudi Arabia’s budget will achieve more financial revenues following a production cut announced by the Kingdom with OPEC and its allies, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), thanks to higher crude prices.

“The impact on the budget and on the external position relative to what we had projected is positive,” Amine Mati, the IMF mission chief to Saudi Arabia, said in an interview in Washington, as reported by Bloomberg.

“So the price impact would offset the loss that could arise from the production,” he added.

IMF experts had pointed to expectations that oil prices would decline by about 17.3 percent in 2023, with an assumed average price per barrel, based on futures markets, at $73.13 in 2023 and $68.90 in 2024, compared to $96.36 in 2022.

The decision of Saudi Arabia and other oil countries to reduce production has moved the global markets, especially as it followed the global banking crisis in the United States and Europe, which contributed to the decline in futures prices in mid-March.

However, the producers’ announcement to cut 1.1 million barrels per day, in addition to Russia’s decision to trim oil production by 500,000 barrels per day until the end of 2023, strengthened price stability.

The IMF estimates predicted performance for the current and next year at a slower-than-expected rate of 3.1 percent in 2023 and 2024, which is much lower than its previous expectations of the growth of the Kingdom’s economy at about 9 percent.

While Saudi Arabia’s economic growth rate may suffer from lower crude production, the cuts won’t affect its non-oil expansion “because that’s going to be driven by domestic demand,” Mati said, according to Bloomberg.

“At least in the short term, we don’t see a disruption in the spending pattern at the central government budget. And on the economy as a whole, we see some of the investment in the private sector driving the growth,” he added.

Saudi Arabia’s General Authority for Statistics (GASTAT) recently revealed that the Kingdom’s economy grew by 8.7 percent over the past year.



Alkhorayef: Saudi Arabia Making Confident Strides Toward Localizing Automotive Industry

Alkhorayef spoke on Wednesday at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Hyundai plant at King Salman Automotive Cluster in King Abdullah Economic City in Jeddah. SPA
Alkhorayef spoke on Wednesday at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Hyundai plant at King Salman Automotive Cluster in King Abdullah Economic City in Jeddah. SPA
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Alkhorayef: Saudi Arabia Making Confident Strides Toward Localizing Automotive Industry

Alkhorayef spoke on Wednesday at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Hyundai plant at King Salman Automotive Cluster in King Abdullah Economic City in Jeddah. SPA
Alkhorayef spoke on Wednesday at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Hyundai plant at King Salman Automotive Cluster in King Abdullah Economic City in Jeddah. SPA

Saudi Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources Bandar Alkhorayef has said the Kingdom is making “confident strides” at an accelerated pace to localize the automotive industry.

Alkhorayef spoke on Wednesday at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Hyundai plant at King Salman Automotive Cluster in King Abdullah Economic City in Jeddah.

He said the Kingdom’s efforts will create added value for the national economy and enhance its global competitiveness in line with the objectives of Saudi Vision 2030.

The plant is being built under a strategic partnership between the Public Investment Fund (PIF) and Hyundai Motor Company, a move that supports the localization of the automotive industry in the Kingdom and advances economic diversification.

The minister described the initiative as an important milestone in the journey to localize the automotive industry due to its significant impact.

He added that it will enhance industrial capabilities, strengthen supply chains, localize production, and develop local content, meeting local and regional demand for automobiles and consolidating the Kingdom's position as a global hub for the automotive industry.

He praised PIF’s role in driving industrial transformation and empowering high-value sectors with tangible economic impact in the Kingdom and the region.

He also highlighted the importance of integrated efforts by all relevant government entities in advancing the localization of the automotive industry, including the establishment of the Hyundai plant.

He thanked the Ministries of Investment, Energy, and Finance; the Ministry of Economy and Planning; the National Industrial Development Center; and the Saudi Industrial Development Fund.

Alkhorayef stressed that the project aligns with the Kingdom's accelerating industrial goals and its vision to transform ambitions into reality.

The National Industrial Strategy aims to attract three global automotive manufacturers to produce 300,000 vehicles annually within a single industrial complex, a goal now realized with Hyundai joining Lucid and Ceer.

The factory is projected to produce 50,000 vehicles annually and contribute approximately $5 billion to the Kingdom's gross domestic product (GDP) by 2045.

Hyundai has had a presence in the Saudi market for over 40 years and currently holds the second-largest market share in the Kingdom’s automotive sector.