Schools, water are priorities as Saudi launches
privatization plan
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[April 25, 2018]
By Andrew Torchia
DUBAI (Reuters) - School buildings and
desalination facilities producing fresh water will feature in some of
the first deals as Saudi Arabia transfers a quarter of its economy to
private hands, an official overseeing the process said on Wednesday.
Turki A. Al Hokail, chief executive of the National Centre for
Privatisation and Public-Private Partnerships, was speaking as the
government formally launched a vast privatisation program focusing on 10
sectors of the economy.
Riyadh is working on new rules to attract foreign as well as local
capital to the scheme and will address potential investors' concern
about their level of control over projects, including their ability to
hire and fire workers, Hokail said.
"This is a big change in the economy. The government is moving from
operating projects to monitoring and regulating them," he said in a
telephone interview. "Operations will be the job of the private sector."
Riyadh announced on Tuesday that it aimed to generate 35 billion to 40
billion riyals ($9 billion to $11 billion) of non-oil state revenues
from the privatization program by 2020, part of a drive to cut Saudi
Arabia's reliance on oil exports.
Some of the money is to come from asset sales in sectors such as
education, water, telecommunications and health care. Some of those
sales could occur through initial public offers of shares, while others
might be direct transfers.
Hokail said Riyadh was willing in principle to consider sales of 100
percent stakes in state firms, but decisions on each deal would depend
on investor demand and market conditions.
The rest of the money would come from public-private partnerships (PPPs)
- deals in which private companies invest in infrastructure and are paid
to operate it for a period, before eventually transferring it to the
state.
DRAFT LAW
Eventually, the privatization program aims to boost the private sector's
contribution to Saudi gross domestic product to 65 percent from 40
percent, easing pressure on government finances that have been strained
by low oil prices.
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Cars drive past the King Abdullah Financial District, north of
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, March 1, 2017. REUTERS/Faisal Al Nasser/File
Photo
“It seeks to eliminate all obstacles that may limit the private sector from
playing a larger role in the development of the kingdom’s economy," Hokail said,
adding that Riyadh was also revising rules on state procurement, markets and
other areas.
Authorities hope to offer a draft law on PPP frameworks for public consultation
and feedback within a week or so, before implementing a final version later this
year, Hokail said.
The lack of such a law, and other legal uncertainties over ownership of state
assets, have prevented significant progress in the privatization program since
authorities began talking about it two years ago.
The relatively modest financial targets for the initial years of the scheme
suggest authorities may have scaled back their expectations because of legal and
other difficulties.
Initially, officials talked of raising $200 billion over an unspecified period.
Both the old and the new revenue targets are separate from Riyadh's intention to
raise about $100 billion from the sale of a stake in national oil giant Saudi
Aramco, which is to take place this year or next.
Hokail said authorities aimed by 2020 to completed five asset sales, 14 PPPs and
four corporatisation exercises, in which state projects would be converted into
independent firms in preparation for their possible sale at a later date.
Among plans in the pipeline are the sale of the Ras Al Khair desalination and
power plant, as well as flour mills and football teams; a PPP for private
companies to build and operate facilities for 60 schools; and the
corporatisation of ports.
Hokail said authorities would be choosy about the identity of buyers of state
assets, vetting them on issues such as their intention to add value to the
economy, boost employment and develop local talent among staff.
(Reporting by Andrew Torchia; Editing by Alison Williams)
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