Saudis ready to face the future as cabinet approves 'Vision 2030' plan

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Saudis ready to face the future as cabinet approves Vision 2030 plan
The Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, King Salman bin Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Nayef and Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman after Saudi Arabia's cabinet agreed to implement a broad reform plan known as Vision 2030 in Riyadh on Monday.

Riyadh - Project meant to provide blueprint for sweeping changes to steer kingdom away from reliance on oil

By AP

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Published: Mon 25 Apr 2016, 6:50 PM

Last updated: Mon 25 Apr 2016, 11:57 PM

Saudi Arabia's Cabinet on Monday approved a long-awaited plan laying out reform priorities for the next decade-and-a-half, setting in motion what is likely to be a period of significant economic change in the oil-rich kingdom.
The project, which includes plans to float a stake in the world's largest oil company and set up one of the world's largest government investment funds, is meant to provide a blueprint for sweeping changes to steer the Opec kingpin sharply away from its decades-long reliance on cheap-to-produce oil.
King Salman announced the approval for the "Vision 2030" plan in a short televised announcement on Monday in which he called on Saudis to work together ensure its success.
The king's son, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, spelled out some details of the programme in a pre-recorded interview aired shortly after the announcement on Saudi-owned broadcaster Al Arabiya. The prince is second in line to the throne, serves as the country's defence minister and chairs a committee formed soon after his father's ascension last year overseeing economic policymaking.
That committee, the Council on Economic and Development Affairs, has been focused on reorienting the kingdom away from its heavy reliance on fossil fuels, creating jobs and boosting foreign investment.
In the wide-ranging interview, Prince Mohammed described the country as having become addicted to oil and said a planned partial initial public offering of the state-owned oil company Saudi Aramco was part of the reform programme. He valued the oil giant at more than $2 trillion, and said that less than five per cent of Aramco would be offered to public shareholders.
 
READ MORE: Less than 5% of Aramco to be sold; world's biggest fund of $2t eyed
 
The Aramco shares would be listed on the Saudi stock exchange, known as the Tadawul, and on an international exchange, possibly in the United States.
"The vision is a road map of our development and economic goals," he said. "Without a doubt Aramco is one of the main keys of this vision and the kingdom's economic renaissance." He said the economic goals of the reforms are intended to eliminate housing and unemployment problems and ensure that water and energy subsidies go to those most in need.
Another way to drive up non-oil revenue, the prince said, is by investing more in mineral mining and boosting the kingdom's own military production capacity. Saudi Arabia was the world's third-largest defence customer last year, with purchases of more than $87 billion last year.
Prince Mohammed also said the kingdom, which annually welcomes millions of Muslim pilgrims to the holy cities of Makkah and Madinah, would become more welcoming to other types of tourists - in line with Saudi Arabia's values. A new residency visa programme could generate additional revenue and would allow Muslims and Arabs to live for extended periods in the country, he said. Lower oil prices have exposed Saudi Arabia to urgent domestic challenges, including a projected budget deficit this year of nealry $90 billion.
Despite past efforts to move the economy away from its reliance on oil, the kingdom's main export still accounted for 72 per cent of total revenue last year.
In addition, 70 per cent of Saudis work in the public sector, where the government is spending heavily on wages. The government is looking for ways to support the private sector to help create jobs for the millions of young people who will be entering the workforce in the coming years and will also be looking for affordable housing as they approach milestones such as marriage.


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