Saudi Arabia expects oil revenue to jump by 46% next year after a deal between the kingdom and other producers to curb output drove up global prices.
The world’s top oil exporter expects to collect 480bn riyals ($128bn) from oil sales in 2017, compared with 329bn this year, the Finance Ministry said in a budget statement last Thursday. 
Non-oil revenue will climb 6.5% next year to 212bn riyals, it said.
Oil prices have rallied since the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, of which Saudi Arabia is the largest member, reached a deal with other producers to curb output next year. The budget is based on the assumption that global producers cut output as promised, Saudi Energy Minister Khalid al-Falih said. Benchmark Brent crude traded above $55 a barrel on Thursday, almost double its low in January. “The oil-revenue increase is in line with the expectations by the authorities that the market is re-balancing higher, and is clearly a sign that oil prices are expected to average $60 per barrel next year,” said John Sfakianakis, director of economic research at the Gulf Research Center.
The Saudi government relies heavily on oil sales for revenue, and its finances have taken a blow since prices started tumbling in 2014. Total projected revenue this year, at 528bn riyals, is less than half what it collected in 2013, when oil was trading above $100 and made up 90% of revenue.
The kingdom has implemented austerity measures this year to weather the downturn. In April, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman rolled out the Saudi Vision 2030, an economic plan to end the country’s “addiction” to oil. The government intends to spend 42bn riyals on the programme in 2017, up from 9bn this year, the Finance Ministry said.




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