The story appears on

Page A8

January 25, 2016

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Business » Finance

Saudi investment body seeks to double annual FDI

SAUDI Arabia aims to at least double annual inflows of foreign direct investment over the next 10 years by focusing on new sectors such as mining, health care and information technology, the head of its investment agency said yesterday.

The plan outlined by Abdullatif al-Othman, governor of the Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority, is part of a radical revamp of economic policy as the kingdom seeks to adapt to an era of cheap oil.

In the past, foreign investment was heavily concentrated in the oil and gas sector of the world’s top crude exporter, as well as downstream industries such as petrochemicals.

But the plunge of oil prices over the past 18 months has called that strategy into question. Othman said SAGIA was now seeking foreign capital in a wide range of sectors without direct links to oil.

“If you look at an economy that has been able to fetch about US$10 billion a year in the traditional sector ... we should be looking at multiples of that,” he said in an interview.

“So our hope is that we would double or triple this level of FDI on a rolling average for the next 10 years.”

SAGIA faces big obstacles. A sluggish bureaucracy and an undeveloped legal system have deterred foreign investment in the past; now low oil prices are slowing growth of the Saudi economy.

Inflows of FDI peaked at about US$40 billion in 2009 but have been trending down since then and totaled just US$8 billion in 2014, figures from the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development show.

Othman said SAGIA would seek to remove bureaucratic or regulatory obstacles to investment by talking to foreign firms to identify their concerns, then discussing them with ministries and other government bodies.

The investment push is part of a larger economic reform drive conceived by Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. Details of the program, which includes privatization, changes to the way in which Saudi Arabia manages its oil wealth and efforts to make state spending more efficient, are set to be announced in coming days or weeks.

Mining may prove one of the most alluring investment areas for foreigners. The country is believed to have big deposits of phosphate, bauxite, base metals and gold.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend