Home Industry Economy Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 projects to be adjusted as needed: Finance Minister Saudi Arabia is accelerating efforts to diversify its economy away from oil under a plan known as Vision 2030 by Reuters April 29, 2024 Image credit: Saudi Arabia, the world’s top oil exporter, will adjust its Vision 2030 plan to transform its economy as needed, scaling back some projects and accelerating others, its finance minister said on Sunday. Speaking at the World Economic Forum’s special meeting on Global Collaboration, Growth and Energy for Development in Riyadh, Mohammed Al Jadaan said the kingdom’s focus is on ensuring the quality of future economic growth, and recognises that the challenges it faces require flexibility. “There are challenges… we don’t have ego, we will change course, we will adjust, we will extend some of the projects, we will downscale some of the projects, we will accelerate some of the projects,” Jadaan said. Vision 2030 Saudi Arabia is accelerating efforts to diversify its economy away from oil under a national plan known as Vision 2030. It aims to develop sectors such as tourism and industry, expand the private sector and create jobs. Non-oil activities vastly outperformed oil sector expansion last year growing by 4.4 per cent, while the overall economy shrank by 0.8 per cent on the back of cuts to oil production and lower prices. Read: Saudi Arabia hits important economic milestone: Non-oil activities at 50% of GDP Saudi Arabia is projected to grow 2.6 per cent this year, a downward revision from 4 per cent forecast in October, the IMF said in its latest regional outlook report on the back of continued output cuts. In the medium term, non-oil growth is expected to come in over 5 per cent a year, Jadaan said in February, although the kingdom is likely to continue to rely on hydrocarbon revenue to drive investments into expanding non-oil activities. On Sunday, Jadaan re-emphasised the role of an expanded private sector in delivering Vision 2030. “Vision 2030 is about empowering the private sector. The government role is to be out of business – the government role is to make policies to enable the private sector but not to actually do the business.” The Arab World’s largest economy needs oil at $96.2 to balance its 2024 budget, the IMF forecast. Tags Economy non-oil economy Saudi Arabia Vision 2030 You might also like TAQA, JERA, Al Bawani Capital to develop 2 power plants in Saudi Arabia Efficio’s Adam Forgács on local content’s role in economic diversification Financial gap to meet SDGs in MEASA hits $5tn annually: NYUAD Trump’s policies may hit EMs, but Saudi stays safe: Citigroup