U.S.
President Barack Obama (R) meets with Saudi King Salman bin Abdulaziz in the
Oval Office of the White House in Washington September 4, 2015. © Gary Cameron
/ Reuters
|
With oil prices
collapsing more than twofold in the space of one year, Saudi Arabia will be
forced to cut “unnecessary expenses” to plug a budget hole estimated at US$120
billion. The announcement was made by the finance minister during an official
visit to the US.
“We have built reserves, cut public debt to near-zero levels and we are now
working on cutting unnecessary expenses while focusing on main development
projects and on building human resources in the kingdom,” Ibrahim Al-Assaf told
CNBC Arabia in an interview broadcast on Sunday.
The
country’s budget balances at prices of just over US$100 per barrel, while Brent
crude is currently selling for just under US$50. Riyadh has command of the
world’s third-highest foreign currency reserves, which stand at around US$650
billion after the government has already spent around US$70 billion covering
the shortfall since the start of the year.
RT report continues:
There has been little indication as to which areas of expenditure would be trimmed. The move was first tentatively touted at the end of last year, when Riyadh promised to “rationalize” the multiplying public sector salaries.
There has been little indication as to which areas of expenditure would be trimmed. The move was first tentatively touted at the end of last year, when Riyadh promised to “rationalize” the multiplying public sector salaries.
“There
are some projects like the ones that have been approved a few years ago and
haven't been carried out until now – that means such projects are not currently
necessary and can be delayed,” said US-educated Al-Assaf, who has previously
worked for the IMF.
Saudi
Arabia has already downscaled several high-profile infrastructure projects,
including a US$200 million plan to buy high-speed trains, and to construct
high-tech football stadiums in large cities. But Al-Assaf insisted that extreme
cuts would be counter-productive.
“Projects
in sectors such as education, health and infrastructure are not only important
for the private sector but also for the long-term growth of the Saudi economy.”
Truly
effective cutbacks could be realized in socially sensitive areas, such as
reducing the US$50 billion the government spends annually in fuel subsidies,
something neighboring UAE has recently done, creating a spike in consumer
energy prices.
Last
month, the IMF said that Saudi Arabia needs “comprehensive energy price
reforms, firm control of the public sector wage bill, greater efficiency in
public sector investment” to stem its drain of valuable cash reserves.
However
Al-Assaf said the country is likely to issue bonds, for the first time in the
best part of a decade, as well as raising money on the international markets
for specific large projects.
However,
the biggest economy in the Arab world which dominates OPEC has been unwilling
to cut its crude output, and is thought to have played a key role in
instigating the slump in crude oil prices. The budget crisis only worsened when
Saudi Arabia started an expensive military campaign in Yemen.
The IMF predicts that the
growth of the country’s economy will slow by 2.8 percent this year.
No comments:
Post a Comment