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Saudi
Arabia – Economy and Business
Saudi Arabia
has an oil-based economy with strong government controls over
major economic activities. Saudi Arabia possesses 25% of the
world's proven petroleum reserves, ranks as the largest exporter
of petroleum, and plays a leading role in
OPEC.
Economic Overview
The
petroleum sector accounts for roughly 75% of budget
revenues, 45% of GDP, and 90% of export earnings. About 40% of
GDP comes from the private sector. Roughly five and a half
million foreign workers play an important role in the Saudi
economy, for example, in the oil and service sectors. The
government is encouraging private sector growth to lessen the
kingdom's dependence on oil and increase employment
opportunities for the swelling Saudi population. The government
has begun to permit private sector and foreign investor
participation in the power generation and telecom sectors. As
part of its effort to attract foreign investment and diversify
the economy, Saudi Arabia acceded to the WTO in
2005 after many years of negotiations. With high oil
revenues enabling the government to post large budget surpluses,
Riyadh has been able to substantially boost spending on job
training and education, infrastructure development, and
government salaries.
Macro-economic trend
Current GDP per capita
of Saudi Arabia soared by a world record-breaking 1,858% in the
Seventies riding on the back of the global oil boom. However,
this bubble was unsustainable and consequently the GDP per
capita shrank by 58% in the Eighties. However successful
diversification efforts helped register a growth of 20% in the
Nineties.
This is a chart of trend of gross
domestic product of Saudi Arabia at market prices
estimated by the International Monetary Fund with figures in
millions of Saudi Arabian Riyals.
|
Year |
Domestic Product |
US Dollar Exchange |
Inflation Index (2000=100) |
|
1980 |
546,602 |
3.32 Saudi Arabian Riyals |
95 |
|
1985 |
376,318 |
3.62 Saudi Arabian Riyals |
92 |
|
1990 |
437,334 |
3.74 Saudi Arabian Riyals |
91 |
|
1995 |
533,504 |
3.74 Saudi Arabian Riyals |
101 |
|
2000 |
706,657 |
3.74 Saudi Arabian Riyals |
100 |
|
2005 |
1,152,600 |
3.74 Saudi Arabian Riyals |
100 |
For purchasing power parity
comparisons, the US Dollar is exchanged at 3.41 Saudi Arabian
Riyals only.
Oil industry
Oil was discovered in Saudi Arabia
by
U.S.
geologists in the 1930s, although largescale production did
not begin until after
World War II. Oil wealth has made possible rapid economic
development, which began in earnest in the 1960s and accelerated
spectacularly in the 1970s, transforming the kingdom.
Saudi oil reserves are the largest
in the world, and Saudi Arabia is the world's leading oil
producer and exporter. Oil accounts for more than 90% of the
country's exports and nearly 75% of government revenues. Proven
reserves are estimated to be 260 billion barrels (41 km³), about
one-quarter of world oil reserves.
More than 95% of all Saudi oil is
produced on behalf of the Saudi Government by the parastatal
giant
Saudi ARAMCO. In June 1993, Saudi ARAMCO absorbed the state
marketing and refining company (SAMAREC), becoming the world's
largest fully integrated oil company. Most Saudi oil exports
move by tanker from Gulf terminals at Ras Tanura and Ju'aymah.
The remaining oil exports are transported via the east-west
pipeline across the kingdom to the Red Sea port of Yanbu. A
major new gas initiative promises to bring significant
investment by U.S. and European oil companies to develop
nonassociated gas fields in three separate parts of Saudi
Arabia. Following final technical agreements with concession
awardees in December 2001, development should begin in 2002.
Due to a sharp rise in petroleum
revenues in 1974 following the 1973
Arab-Israeli war, Saudi Arabia became one of the
fastest-growing economies in the world. It enjoyed a substantial
surplus in its overall trade with other countries; imports
increased rapidly; and ample government revenues were available
for development, defense, and aid to other Arab and Islamic
countries.
But higher oil prices led to
development of more oil fields around the world and reduced
global consumption. The result, beginning in the mid-1980s, was
a worldwide oil glut, which introduced an element of planning
uncertainty for the first time in a decade. Saudi oil
production, which had increased to almost 10 million barrels
(1.6 million m³) per day during 1980-81, dropped to about 2
million barrels/day (300,000 m³/day) in 1985. Budgetary deficits
developed, and the government drew down its foreign assets.
Responding to financial pressures, Saudi Arabia gave up its role
as the "swing producer" within OPEC in the summer of 1985 and
accepted a production quota. Since then, Saudi oil policy has
been guided by a desire to maintain market and quota shares.
However, beginning in late 1997,
Saudi Arabia again faced the challenge of low oil prices. Due to
a combination of factors--the East
Asian economic crises, a warm winter in the West caused by
El Niño, and an increase in non-OPEC oil production--demand
for oil slowed and pulled oil prices down by more than
one-third.
Saudi Arabia was a key player in
coordinating the successful 1999 campaign of OPEC and other
oil-producing countries to raise the price of oil to its highest
level since the Gulf War by managing production and supply of
petroleum. That same year, Saudi Arabia established the Supreme
Economic Council to formulate and better coordinate economic
development policies in order to accelerate institutional and
industrial reform.
Trade
In recent years, Saudi Arabia
sought to join the World Trade Organization. Negotiations have
focused on the degree to which Saudi Arabia is willing to
increase market access to foreign goods and services and the
timeframe for becoming fully compliant with
World Trade Organization obligations. In April 2000, the
government established the Saudi Arabian General Investment
Authority to encourage foreign direct investment in Saudi
Arabia. Saudi Arabia maintains a "negative list" of sectors in
which foreign investment is prohibited, but the government plans
to open some closed sectors such as telecommunications,
insurance, and power transmission/distribution over time. As of
November 2005 , Saudi Arabia was officially approved to enter
World Trade Organization.
Diversification
Through 5-year development plans,
the government has sought to allocate its petroleum income to
transform its relatively undeveloped, oil-based economy into
that of a modern industrial state while maintaining the
kingdom's traditional Islamic values and customs. Although
economic planners have not achieved all their goals, the economy
has progressed rapidly. Oil wealth has increased the standard of
living of most Saudis. However, significant population growth
has strained the government's ability to finance further
improvements in the country's standard of living. Heavy
dependence on petroleum revenue continues, but industry and
agriculture now account for a larger share of economic activity.
The mismatch between the job skills of Saudi graduates and the
needs of the private job market at all levels remains the
principal obstacle to economic diversification and development;
about 4.6 million non-Saudis are employed in the economy.
Saudi Arabia's first two
development plans, covering the 1970s, emphasized
infrastructure. The results were impressive - the total length
of paved highways tripled, power generation increased by a
multiple of 28, and the capacity of the seaports grew tenfold.
For the third plan (1980-85), the emphasis changed. Spending on
infrastructure declined, but it rose markedly on education,
health, and social services. The share for diversifying and
expanding productive sectors of the economy (primarily industry)
did not rise as planned, but the two industrial cities of Jubail
and Yanbu--built around the use of the country's oil and gas to
produce steel, petrochemicals, fertilizer, and refined oil
products--were largely completed.
In the fourth plan (1985-90), the
country's basic infrastructure was viewed as largely complete,
but education and training remained areas of concern. Private
enterprise was encouraged, and foreign investment in the form of
joint ventures with Saudi public and private companies was
welcomed. The private sector became more important, rising to
70% of non-oil
GDP by 1987. While still concentrated in trade and commerce,
private investment increased in industry, agriculture, banking,
and construction companies. These private investments were
supported by generous government financing and incentive
programs. The objective was for the private sector to have 70%
to 80% ownership in most joint venture enterprises.
The fifth plan (1990-95)
emphasized consolidation of the country's defenses; improved and
more efficient government social services; regional development;
and, most importantly, creating greater private-sector
employment opportunities for Saudis by reducing the number of
foreign workers.
The sixth plan (1996-2000) focused
on lowering the cost of government services without cutting them
and sought to expand educational training programs. The plan
called for reducing the kingdom's dependence on the petroleum
sector by diversifying economic activity, particularly in the
private sector, with special emphasis on industry and
agriculture. It also continued the effort to "Saudiize" the
labor force.
The seventh plan (2000-2004)
focuses more on economic diversification and a greater role of
the private sector in the Saudi economy. For the period
2000-2004, the Saudi Government aims at an average GDP growth
rate of 3.16% each year, with projected growths of 5.04% for the
private sector and 4.01% for the non-oil sector. The government
also has set a target of creating 817,300 new jobs for Saudi
nationals.
Investment
The stock
market capitalisation of listed companies in Saudi Arabia
was valued at $646,104 million in 2005 by the
World Bank.[5]
ICT
Services
Saudi Arabia is currently enjoying
a massive boom in its personal computer industry since the
deregulation of 2002. PC per capita has exploded to nearly 43%
of the population in 2005 from just 13% in 2002 leapfrogging
over the rest of West Asia.
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