The $400 million Saudi loan would help recover the Tunisian budget after it failed to mobilize financial resources from traditional partners and meet the International Monetary Fund (IMF) conditions to obtain the $1.9 billion financial loan, according to financial Tunisian experts.
In July, Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed al-Jadaan and his Tunisian counterpart, Sihem Boughdiri, signed an agreement over a soft loan of $400 million and a grant of $100 million.
The Tunisian parliament ratified the loan agreement between Tunisia and Saudi Arabia.
Addressing the parliament, the government explained the importance of this loan in reviving the national economy after a slow mobilization of financial resources for the state budget.
Tunisia's traditional financial partners required concluding a new agreement with the IMF to grant new funds.
The Tunisian Ministry of Finance stated that the negotiation and procedures for the Saudi loan were easier than loans from other multilateral or bilateral lenders.
It stressed that withdrawing the Saudi loan depends on its entry into force only, while other loans involve legal approval and the implementation of the listed structural economic reforms, requiring a long implementation time.
Tunisia can only issue a mortgage loan in the global financial market with a guarantee from a donor sovereign state, preventing its entrance into the market.
Notably, the total financial cooperation between Saudi Arabia and Tunisia amounted to about $2.2 billion in 49 projects to support the Tunisian economy.