Saudi Arabia’s non-oil exports up 12% in December 2023: GASTAT 

According to the General Authority for Statistics, the total value of non-oil exports in December reached SR26.5 billion ($7.07 billion), marking an increase from SR23.6 billion in the same period in the preceding year. Shutterstock
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Updated 21 February 2024
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Saudi Arabia’s non-oil exports up 12% in December 2023: GASTAT 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s non-oil exports experienced a 12 percent surge in December 2023 compared to the corresponding month of the previous year, official data showed. 

According to the General Authority for Statistics, the total value of non-oil exports in December reached SR26.5 billion ($7.07 billion), marking an increase from SR23.6 billion in the same period in the preceding year. 

Strengthening the non-oil private sector is of utmost importance for Saudi Arabia as the country actively diversifies its economy away from oil, aligning with the objectives outlined in Vision 2030. 

The report highlighted that chemical and allied products constituted the majority of exported non-oil goods in December, accounting for 32.4 percent of total non-oil merchandise exports. 

Additionally, GASTAT pointed out that the ratio of non-oil exports to imports rose to 43.8 percent in December, compared to the same month in 2022. This increase was driven by a 12 percent rise in non-oil exports, contrasting with a 7.1 percent decline in imports during the same period.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia’s trade balance increased for the second consecutive month in December 2023, reaching SR39 billion. 

The Kingdom posted a trade balance of SR28 billion in November, while it stood at SR30 billion and SR41 billion in October and September respectively. 

The report also revealed that Saudi Arabia’s total trade balance for 2023 reached SR417 billion. 

However, the Kingdom’s overall merchandise exports dipped by 9.47 percent year-on-year in December to SR98.5 billion, driven by a fall in oil exports. 

According to GASTAT, oil exports fell by 15.8 percent in December 2023 compared to the same month of the previous year. This dip in oil exports was due to Saudi Arabia’s decision to reduce crude output in accordance with an agreement by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies, known as OPEC+. 

To maintain market stability, the Kingdom, in April 2023, reduced oil output by 500,000 barrels per day, which is now extended until the end of December 2024.

Saudi Arabia also pledged an additional oil output cut of 1 million bpd in July, which continued until the end of December 2023. 

China was Saudi Arabia’s primary merchandise trading partner in December, with exports to the Asian nation amounting to SR14.6 billion, or 14.8 percent of the total.

China was closely followed by Japan and India, with SR10.9 and SR8.7 billion of the total exports, respectively. 

South Korea, the UAE, the US were also featured in the top 10 destinations for Saudi exports, along with Egypt, Malaysia, Bahrain, and Singapore.

On the import side, China held the lead, accounting for 21 percent or SR12.47 billion in imports in December 2023.

Jeddah Islamic Port ranked as the highest entry point for goods into Saudi Arabia in December, with a value of SR14.8 billion, constituting 24.6 percent of the overall imports.

In another report, which covered the overall statistics for the fourth quarter of 2023, GASTAT noted that Saudi Arabia’s merchandise exports decreased by 14.4 percent to SR297.9 billion compared to the same period in 2022. 

GASTAT revealed that a dip in oil exports drove this fall, which also attributed to Saudi Arabia’s decision to reduce the crude output. 


Saudi Arabia’s budget deficit widens to $25.3bn in Q4 2025 as spending rises 

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Saudi Arabia’s budget deficit widens to $25.3bn in Q4 2025 as spending rises 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s capital spending rose 18 percent year on year in the fourth quarter of 2025, while higher overall expenditure widened the Kingdom’s budget deficit to SR94.85 billion ($25.28 billion), official data showed. 

According to the Ministry of Finance’s Quarterly Budget Performance Report, government spending increased to SR371.6 billion in the three months to December, up 3 percent from SR360.5 billion in the same period a year earlier. 

Capital expenditure — classified as spending on non-financial assets — climbed to SR50.9 billion in the fourth quarter from SR43.1 billion a year earlier, highlighting sustained investment in infrastructure and development projects. 

Total revenues reached SR276.7 billion in the quarter, increasing from SR269.9 billion in the third quarter but declining about 9 percent from a year earlier due to weaker oil income. 

Oil revenues totaled SR154.2 billion in the fourth quarter, down 10 percent year on year despite a quarterly increase supported by higher production levels. For the full year, oil revenues fell around 20 percent to SR606.5 billion from SR756.6 billion in 2024. 

Non-oil revenues — a key pillar of Saudi Arabia’s diversification strategy — stood at SR122.6 billion in the fourth quarter. On an annual basis, non-oil revenues rose by 1 percent to SR505.3 billion in 2025, compared with SR502.5 billion the previous year. 

Saudi Arabia maintained an expansionary fiscal stance throughout 2025, with total government expenditure reaching SR1.39 trillion, up 1 percent from SR1.36 trillion in 2024. 

Spending increased across several priority sectors. Education expenditure rose 4 percent to SR212.5 billion, while health and social development spending increased 2 percent to SR278.9 billion.  

Military and security sector spending climbed about 5 percent to SR249.1 billion, while public administration expenditure grew 7 percent. Spending on general items rose 3 percent, and regional administration outlays increased marginally by 0.4 percent. 

For the full fiscal year, total revenues reached SR1.11 trillion against expenditure of SR1.388 trillion, resulting in a budget deficit of SR276.6 billion — exceeding earlier government projections as oil revenues declined. 

Public debt rose to SR1.52 trillion at the end of 2025, compared with SR1.22 trillion a year earlier, as the Kingdom increased borrowing to finance fiscal gaps while continuing to fund large-scale development and infrastructure projects.