The Saudi cabinet has approved
a major plan to diversify the national economy away from oil with an aim to
generate 450,000 jobs in non-government sectors by 2020, officials said
Tuesday.
The National Transformation
Programme (NTP) 2020 also aims to cut public expenditures by 40 percent over
the next five years and boost the contribution of the private sector, officials
said.
NTP is one of several
programmes designed to achieve the goals of the Saudi Vision 2030, an 84-page
document released in April by Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, 30, who
is leading the reform charge.
The NTP will be implemented
through 543 initiatives across 24 government bodies at a cost of 270 billion
riyals ($72 billion) over the next five years, State Minister Mohammed
al-Sheikh told a press conference in the western coastal city of Jeddah.
Minister of Energy, Industry
and Mineral Resources Khalid al-Falih said under the Programme, the ministry
aims to boost the competitiveness of the Saudi energy sector, double the
production of natural gas and boost non-oil exports.
He said the NTP envisages to
increase non-oil exports from 185 billion riyals to over 300 billion riyals by
2030.
Under the programme, the
ministry plans to build a huge international complex for marine industries that
will provide 80,000 jobs and cut imports by $12 billion annually, the minister
said.
A number of industrial cities
are planned under the Programme that are slated to generate 150,000 jobs, said
Faleh who last month replaced long-serving oil minister Ali al-Naimi.
Other programmes under the
Vision 2030 include a plan to float less than five percent of giant state oil
firm Saudi Aramco on the stock market.
The proceeds would become part
of the world's largest state investment fund, with $2 trillion in assets.
Profits from the investment
fund would help economic diversification and provide an alternative to oil
revenues that have fallen by about half since 2014.
The collapse has accelerated
Saudi efforts to move away from petroleum which still accounts for the bulk of
government income.
Among its wide-ranging goals
the Vision aims to reduce unemployment, increase women's participation in the
workforce, boost private sector economic contributions, and develop cultural
and entertainment activities in the kingdom.
Saudi Arabia is one of the
world's most conservative societies, but more than half of its citizen
population is younger than 25.
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