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Saudi Arabia is slowing a drive to cut its huge fiscal deficit in order to revive the economy, but the state budget plan for 2019 suggests it may not have room to boost growth by much.

With unemployment among Saudis at a record 12.9 per cent, creating jobs is becoming increasingly important to justify reforms launched more than two years ago by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, who aims to diversify the economy beyond oil exports.

The 2019 budget, released on Tuesday, reflected that. It promised a 7-per-cent increase in spending, which officials said would lift growth in the non-oil part of the economy and start bringing down unemployment from next year.

But even that moderate rise in spending will come at a major cost, the budget plan showed: a dramatic reduction in the pace at which Riyadh shrinks the deficit, which it has pledged to eliminate entirely by 2023.

For three years – ever since Riyadh ran an eye-popping deficit of 367 billion riyals (about $132-billion) in 2015, or about 15 per cent of gross domestic product, threatening its financial stability – fiscal policy focused to a large extent on reassuring markets by cutting the deficit.

The finance ministry said on Tuesday that the deficit shrank to 136 billion riyals or an estimated 4.6 per cent of GDP this year, from 230 billion riyals in 2017.

The 2019 budget, however, projected the deficit would shrink only marginally to 131 billion riyals or 4.2 per cent of GDP next year. Many private analysts said the budget’s spending and revenue numbers implied the deficit would actually rise.

Bilal Khan, senior regional economist at Standard Chartered, predicted a deficit of 5 per cent in 2019 and Monica Malik, chief economist at Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank, forecast more than 7 per cent.

Jason Tuvey, senior emerging markets economist at Capital Economics, estimated that if oil prices did not rebound from current levels, the deficit would near 10 per cent in 2019 – a figure that Saudi Arabia could not sustain in the long run.

That would leave Riyadh in danger of missing the 2023 target for eliminating the deficit by a wide margin, which could revive markets’ concern about the health of Saudi finances, or of being pressured into drastic austerity steps between 2020 and 2023 to hit the target.

For these reasons, Saudi Arabia’s room to pursue a go-for-growth fiscal policy is limited, and it will not be able to abandon austerity steps entirely next year, economists said. This could keep expansion of the non-oil sector sluggish.

“While there may be some fiscal loosening in the first half of next year, we think that austerity will probably resume in the second half of 2019,” Mr. Tuvey said.

TARGET

The non-oil part of the economy grew just 2.3 per cent in 2018, far too slowly to have much of an impact in cutting unemployment in a country where the population of Saudi citizens is expanding at an annual rate of close to 2 per cent.

Riyadh originally set a 2020 date for balancing its budget, pushing that back to 2023 a year ago as the economy struggled. In recent months, officials have not abandoned the 2023 deadline but they have sought to soften its significance.

In late October, after much planning for the 2019 budget was completed, Finance Minister Mohammed al-Jadaan said that while Riyadh would balance its budgets over the medium term, it would accept some deficits after 2023 if they were needed to spur the economy.

In postbudget news conferences on Wednesday, senior officials said they remained committed to fiscal balance but did not specifically mention 2023.

Some aspects of the budget indicated key austerity policies would go ahead, however. Mr. al-Jadaan said Riyadh had no intention of changing policy toward fees that it charges for hiring expatriates and issuing residence permits to their dependents.

The fees are due to rise next year, increasing financial pressure on the private sector, which had lobbied for the rises to be delayed.

Also, officials declined to rule out on Wednesday the possibility of further hikes in domestic fuel prices. Under previously announced policy, domestic prices of fuels including gasoline, diesel and kerosene may be raised in 2019.

Domestic fuel price rises may be the only way that Riyadh can achieve a projection in its 2019 budget for oil revenues to rise 9 per cent to 662 billion riyals, as many economists think international oil prices are unlikely to rise much, if at all.

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