MbS made the remarks at an annual speech to the advisory Shura Council, which he gave on behalf of his father, King Salman
The law also seeks to improve control of public spending and transparency.
“The law requires government departments which enjoy fiscal independence as well as government-related companies to transfer surplus revenues to the public treasury as public revenues. The law also aims to regulate government departments’ public spending and control government revenues, as well as to provide an accurate database for revenues and expenditures,” a statement on Shaikh Mohammed’s website said.
The law states that government entities are required to abide by a number of controls, criteria, and procedures that seek to rein in public spending and control government income and provide an accurate database about their income and spending. Government entities have to transfer their income to the government’s public treasury account, and they are prohibited from retaining any part of their income or spending it on their activities or investments or utilizing it, according to the new legislation, the statement said.
The new law, Number 35 of 2009, replaces Law Number 18 of 2006 and requires all government entities to provide the government with their annual budget, which must be approved by the Supreme Fiscal Committee. The law also forces financially-independent government companies to transfer their surpluses to the public treasury.
The new law allows the companies re-invest profits and revenue surpluses before transferring them to the public treasury, with the approval of the Supreme Fiscal Committee and in consultation with Investment Corporation of Dubai, which oversees the emirate’s investment portfolio.
MbS made the remarks at an annual speech to the advisory Shura Council, which he gave on behalf of his father, King Salman
His visit to Cairo aimed to salvage stalled negotiations mediated by Egypt, Qatar and the United States to end the conflict
The group accused Israel, which has so far refused to comment, as US denies involvement
Hundreds of pagers belonging to the armed group exploded in Lebanon on Tuesday, killed 12 people, including two children, and wounded up to 2,800 others
They view it as a pivotal move toward fostering inclusivity and diversity in corporate structures
Israel has not yet commented on the explosions
The meeting saw engaging discussions on Sinomach’s strategic initiatives and ongoing projects in the region