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Chart 5: More sustained private non-oil sector growth needed in Saudi Chart 6: Oil sector large; government controls 60% of real economy 25 mae Oil Sector mam Private Non-Oil Sector mam Government Non-Oil Sector >Real GDP growth (Yyoy) cr MMOnOAr MY . . . SS88S8SS555 Oil Sector mPrivate Non-Oil Sector = Government Non-Oil Sector NNNNNNNN Source: Haver, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research. Series uses contributions to growth from real GDP Source: Haver, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research. Data as of 2015. data with 1999 base year prior to 2010. Human capital is critical and takes time to build In our view, improvements to human capital, rather than business climate supply-side reforms, are the critical barriers to overcome. While building the appropriately qualified workforce takes time, Saudi Arabia has been making progress in this area. c25% of Saudi tertiary graduates complete humanities and arts programs, but this is down from 39.4% in 1999. Graduates from social sciences, business and law represented the largest share of graduates at 27.2% of total in 2014, up from 15.5% in 1999. Still, as we discuss in later sections, diversification prospects are mixed across sectors and will likely depend in part on providing the appropriate incentives to the private sector. Chart 7: Distribution of Saudi tertiary graduates by field of study (%) 40 35 m1999 = 2014 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 wn <= > o o Oo wn wn 5 S $2 $8 s2F 5 5 5 s 3 5 ef 6S £5 = & = < 5 Ow oS oS = 2 oO a oO co] BH wn oo = (ep) no Lu na o <a ZS DoD ® as ae Ss = = BG CoG < os Lo ES o ge & = 2 2 x= Source: UNESCO, BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research Mobilizing domestic resources is key The NTP makes clear that part of the NTP costs (40%) will need to be shouldered by the private sector. Out of a total estimated NTP cost of SAR447bn (USS119bn; 18.4% of GDP), the NTP implies that the private sector will need to contribute about SAR179bn over the coming five years (US$47.6bn; 7.4% of GDP). Implementation of growth- boosting initiatives will require a challenging crowding in of private sector investment. The NTP expects only a SAR40bn increase in the level of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), meaning that the bulk of private sector investment could have to come from domestic sources. While the government investment is generally in retrenchment mode, the NTP may be suggesting that selective and strategic projects are likely to go ahead. Authorities have also suggested a number of projects could be structured as Public- Private Partnerships (PPP). OS merrill Lynch GEMs Paper #26 | 30 June 2016 15 HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016125

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Filename HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016125.jpg
File Size 0.0 KB
OCR Confidence 85.0%
Has Readable Text Yes
Text Length 2,628 characters
Indexed 2026-02-04T16:27:01.409275
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