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Saudi finance minister reshuffle reflects reality

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Reuters
Reuters
Reuters is an international news organisation owned by Thomson Reuters

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s appointment of a new finance minister reflects the direction of the kingdom’s economy: more joined-up, and with more power in the hands of its young deputy crown prince.

Outgoing Ibrahim Alassaf served for 20 years in an increasingly disempowered ministry, which struggled to cut spending fast enough to cope with falling oil revenue.

Last year, his role narrowed when some state investment funds under his control were shifted to different ministries. These included the Public Investment Fund (PIF), now tipped to become a $2 trillion sovereign-wealth powerhouse aimed at reducing the kingdom’s dependence on oil.

His successor, Mohammed al-Jadaan, has to pick up with the task that bedevilled Alassaf: justifying cuts to government spending in order to reduce a budget deficit that neared $100 billion last year. That means making Saudis comfortable with the need to keep tightening belts if the kingdom refuses to take action to boost oil prices by cutting its own production.

saudi-in-post
Saudi Arabia’s Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman reacts upon his arrival at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France.─Reuters/File

In reality, the biggest input in the Saudi budget is beyond al-Jadaan’s control. Despite the government’s plans to diversify the economy, crude oil is still forecast to account for 72 percent of export revenue in 2016, according to the International Monetary Fund. The $17.5 billion raised in an international bond issuance last month will help to steady the ship, but more borrowing will probably be required if oil prices stay rooted around $50 per barrel.

The most significant thing about former lawyer al-Jadaan, who was named head of the Capital Markets Authority only last year, is that he is effectively beholden for his new job to Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

The young prince is the architect of Saudi’s diversification plan and future vision, and through various minister-level transplants he has now has centralised control over oil, fiscal policy and defence. If the prince is as serious about reform as he seems, this latest move is a positive one.

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