Saudi privatisation plans target $11bn in non-oil revenues by 2020
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Saudi privatisation plans target $11bn in non-oil revenues by 2020

Saudi privatisation plans target $11bn in non-oil revenues by 2020

The delivery document released on Tuesday charts the way forward for the period ending in 2020

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Saudi Arabia aims to generate SAR35bn-40bn ($9bn-11bn) in non-oil revenues from its privatisation programme by 2020 and create up to 12,000 jobs, according to a document published by the official Saudi Press Agency on Tuesday.

The initiative targets 14 public-private partnership (PPP) investments worth SAR24bn-28bn. It includes the corporatisation of Saudi ports and the privatisation of the production sector at the Saudi Saline Water Conversion Corp (SWCC) and the Ras Al Khair desalination and power plant, the document showed.

The government has said it plans to raise about $200bn through privatisation in coming years as part of “Vision 2030” reforms that aim to transform the economy of the world’s top oil exporter. It separately wants to raise another $100bn through the sale of a 5 per cent stake in Saudi Aramco.

“The privatisation programme aims to strengthen competition, raise the quality of services and economic development, improve the business environment, and remove obstacles that prevent the private sector from playing a bigger role in the kingdom’s development …” economy minister Mohammed al-Tuwaijri said in a statement.

The delivery document released on Tuesday charts the way forward for the period ending in 2020, during which the government plans to privatise the national football league, flour mills at the General Silos and Flour Mills Organisation and part of SWCC.

Read: Saudi hires Jadwa Investment to advise on privatisation of football clubs

It will also work on corporatising ports, privatising some services in the transportation sector, and transforming King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre into a non-profit organisation.

Most processes will be limited to corporatisation and preparatory procedures, with full privatisation not expected before 2020, according to the document.

The government also plans to introduce a new indicator to evaluate the privatisation process in each target sector based on the number of bids submitted by the private sector and their value compared with the original financial value.

The full programme has over 100 potential initiatives in more than 10 sectors.

It targets SAR60.99bn in non-government investments by 2020 with a goal of contributing up to SAR14bn to gross domestic product and up to SAR33bn worth of savings in the government’s capital and operating expenses from PPP investments.

John Sfakianakis, a former adviser to the government and director of economic research at the Jeddah-based Gulf Research Center, called the delivery plan an important milestone.

“Privatisation would improve efficiency and productivity, internally, allowing the kingdom to employ all material and human resources,” he said.


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