by MrBill » Thu 26 Jan 2006, 03:37:56
Daryl, don't you mean Copernicus? By the way, I highly reccommend you check out this
this guy's site for more informed discourse.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')or fiscal year 2004, Saudi Arabia originally had been expecting a budget deficit. However, this was based on an extremely conservative price assumption of $19 per barrel for Saudi oil -- and assumed production of 7.7 million bbl/d. Both of these estimates turned out to be far below actual levels. As a result, as of mid-December 2004, the Saudi Finance Ministry was expecting a huge budget surplus of $26.1 billion, on budget revenues of $104.8 billion (nearly double the country's original estimate) and expenditures of $78.6 billion (28 percent above the approved budget levels). This surplus is being used for several purposes, including: paying down the Kingdom's public debt (to $164 billion from $176 billion at the start of 2004); extra spending on education and development projects; increased security expenditures (possibly an additional $2.5 billion dollars in 2004; see below) due to threats from terrorists; and higher payments to Saudi citizens through subsidies (for housing, education, health care, etc.). For 2005, Saudi Arabia is assuming a balanced budget, with revenues and expenditures of $74.6 billion each.
In spite of the recent surge in its oil income, Saudi Arabia continues to face serious long-term economic challenges, including high rates of unemployment (around 13 percent of Saudi nationals, possibly higher), one of the world's fastest population growth rates, and the consequent need for increased government spending. All of these place pressures on Saudi oil revenues. The Kingdom also is facing serious security threats, including a number of terrorist attacks (on foreign workers, primarily) in 2003 and 2004. In response, the Saudis reportedly have ramped up spending in the security area (reportedly by 50 percent in 2004, from $5.5 billion in 2003). Saudi Arabia's per capita oil export revenues remain far below high levels reached during the 1970s and early 1980s. In 2004, Saudi Arabia earned around $4,564 per person, versus $22,589 in 1980. This 80 percent decline in real per capita oil export revenues since 1980 is in large part due to the fact that Saudi Arabia's young population has nearly tripled since 1980, while oil export revenues in real terms have fallen by over 40 percent (despite recent increases). Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia has faced nearly two decades of heavy budget and trade deficits, the expensive 1990/1991 war with Iraq, and total public debt of around $175 billion. On the other hand, Saudi Arabia does have extensive foreign assets -- around $110 billion -- which provide a substantial fiscal "cushion."
Saudi Arabia Finances
Michael Moore aside, it is wrong to assume just because Saudi has the oil that they have money to burn. They did not wisely manage their money in the past and squandered quite a bit on unprofitable projects while poorly managing their people's wealth expectations. When oil prices were low they ran budget deficits. This is a big hole in the petroldollar recycling fantasties propping up the USA. Well, in any case, that was a fight from another day, not here to re-hash it.
So yes, US debt would be considered a foreign asset in Saudi Arabia, but they have minimal currency risk as they fund this asset by selling oil which is also denominated in dollars. If they buy euro or other foreign assets then they open up a foreign currency mismatch.
FWIW, they (and other OPEC members) seem to be managing their wealth a lot better this time around with glaring exceptions (Nigeria, Iran, Venezuela and Indonesia).
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.