Saudi Arabia recently
announced the implementation of their Vision 2030 program which is aimed at
diversifying their economy from its reliance on oil. This will be
accomplished, in part, by partially privatizing the state-owned oil company,
Saudi Aramco, and forming the world's largest sovereign wealth fund. The
Vision 2030 program includes the goal of raising the nation's share of non-oil
exports in non-oil GDP from 16 percent to 50 percent and to increase non-oil
government revenue from SR 163 billion to SR 1 trillion. The Kingdom also
believes that Saudi Aramco has the ability to transform itself from a leader in
the global oil sector to a leader in other sectors. What those sectors are has yet to be determined.
The the changes proposed
by the Saudi government will help reduce the Kingdom's reliance on oil
revenues, however, a 2015 study by Bassam A. Olbassam shows that
the ten five-year development plans that the Saudi government has issued since
1970 have proven to be completely ineffective at diversifying the economy using
four variables:
1.) oil share of GDP
2.) share of the private
sector in GDP
3.) oil exports as a
percentage of the nation's total exports
4.) oil revenues as a
percentage of the nation's total revenues.
A recent report by McKinsey Global Institute
looks at the potential for the transformation of the Saudi economy and, in the
report, we find this graphic:
Obviously, reducing the
Saudi government's reliance on oil revenues from 90 percent in 2013 to 30
percent in 2030 will take a mammoth effort.
If you want to get
another viewpoint on the importance of oil to the Saudi economy, here is a
graphic showing how real GDP has grown since 1970, thanks in large part to
rising oil prices:
While the Saudi economy
is the first economy that comes to mind when we think of nations that are captive to oil, the economies of other nations are even more reliant on the
exports of fuels including oil, natural gas and coal as shown on this graph from the World Economic Forum:
Nations whose economies
rely on fuel exports for more than 90 percent of total exports included Iraq,
Libya (in 2010), Venezuela, Algeria, Brunei Darussalam, Kuwait, Azerbaijan and
Sudan. Notice that Saudi Arabia comes in eleventh place with 87.4 percent
of the value of their total national exports coming from fuels.
Here is another way of
looking at which nations are most dependent on oil as a key part of their
economies:
Both Kuwait and Libya are
more reliant on oil revenues as a part of their total economy than Saudi
Arabia. With Iran's oil production ramping up in the post-nuclear deal
era, their reliance on oil revenues are certain to rise, both as a percentage
of the nation's total exports and as a percentage of their GDP.
While Saudi Arabia makes
the headlines when it comes to the world's oil markets, it is interesting to
see that many other nations rely heavily on fuel exports as a driver of
economic growth. While most of the fuel exporting nations are not global
economic heavyweights, the drop in oil prices over the past year and a half
have pushed down economic growth levels in the affected nations, including the
developing and developed economies of Russia, Norway and Canada, all of which
rely on oil exports as a key part of international trade.
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