Earlier this week, Saudi Arabia announced two pieces of news that the oil markets will be keeping a close eye on. In this latest episode of palace intrigue, King Salman has taken further steps to consolidate power in the Salman branch of the royal family and reversed some of the austerity measures implemented in 2016, the latter signalling tears in the fabric of the social contract with the Saudi public.
King Salman’s sons, Abdulaziz bin Salman and Khaled bin Salman, will become Minister of State for Energy and Saudi Ambassador to the US respectively.
- Prince Abdulaziz has held a variety of senior positions in the oil ministry through the years and was a proponent of abandoning the market share strategy
- Prince Khaled has served as an advisor to the Saudi embassy in Washington – his placement will be to help strengthen ties between the US and Saudi, consistent with the messages since the Trump and Deputy Crown Prince meeting in March 2017
Prince Abdulaziz and Prince Khaled are half-brothers; Prince Khaled is a younger brother to the Deputy Crown Prince, Mohammed bin Salman.
The other key decision this week was the reversal of civil service salary and benefits cuts. The austerity measures have caused discontent with the public, of which c.70% work for the civil service, leading to cries demanding the reversal of salary cuts, reinstatement of benefits, scrapping the planned IPO of Saudi Aramco and a change of the ruling system from an absolute to a constitutional monarchy – the latter being a key concern and threat to the Salmans’ power. The reversal of the cuts were well received and although undermines the economic outlook of Saudi Arabia, is clearly much more desirable than public revolt.
The temporary austerity measures reduced the spending deficit from USD97 billion in 2015 to USD79 billion in 2016. The target for 2017 was set at an ambitious USD53 billion, but this now looks unachievable with the announced reversals. The reversals place the Deputy Crown Prince in an awkward position within the family’s diverging aspirations for the Kingdom with the potential undermining of his Vision 2030 which aimed to scale back the public sector wage bill and civil service, with diversification of the economy. The durability and longevity of other Saudi measures and now being put to the test.
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