Non-Oil GDP Share: 76% ▲ -7.7pp vs 2020 | Saudi Unemployment: 3.5% ▲ -0.5pp vs 2023 | PIF AUM: $941.3B ▲ +$345B vs 2022 | Inbound FDI: $21.3B ▼ -6.4% vs 2023 | Female Participation: 33% ▲ -1.1pp vs 2023 | Credit Rating: Aa3/A+ ▲ Moody's / Fitch | GDP Growth: 2.0% ▲ +1.5pp vs 2023 | Umrah Pilgrims: 16.92M ▲ vs 11.3M target | Non-Oil GDP Share: 76% ▲ -7.7pp vs 2020 | Saudi Unemployment: 3.5% ▲ -0.5pp vs 2023 | PIF AUM: $941.3B ▲ +$345B vs 2022 | Inbound FDI: $21.3B ▼ -6.4% vs 2023 | Female Participation: 33% ▲ -1.1pp vs 2023 | Credit Rating: Aa3/A+ ▲ Moody's / Fitch | GDP Growth: 2.0% ▲ +1.5pp vs 2023 | Umrah Pilgrims: 16.92M ▲ vs 11.3M target |

Ministry of Finance

The Saudi government ministry responsible for fiscal policy, government budgeting, public debt management, and financial oversight of national transformation spending.

Ministry of Finance — Encyclopedia | Saudi Vision 2030

Definition

The Ministry of Finance (MoF) is the Saudi government ministry responsible for managing the Kingdom’s fiscal policy, preparing the national budget, overseeing public debt, administering government revenues and expenditures, and ensuring the financial sustainability of Vision 2030 programmes.

Overview

The Ministry of Finance is one of the most powerful government institutions in the Kingdom, controlling the allocation of public resources across all sectors. Under Vision 2030, the ministry has overseen a dramatic evolution in Saudi fiscal management — from a system almost entirely dependent on oil revenues to one that increasingly incorporates taxation (VAT, excise taxes, expatriate levies), debt issuance, and non-oil revenue streams.

The ministry prepares the annual national budget, which has grown substantially under Vision 2030 as the government increases spending on infrastructure, social services, and economic diversification. Simultaneously, MoF has been tasked with maintaining fiscal discipline, managing budget deficits during periods of low oil prices, and building fiscal reserves through the Fiscal Balance Program.

Saudi Arabia’s re-entry into international debt markets has been managed through MoF, with the Kingdom issuing billions of dollars in conventional bonds and sukuk (Islamic bonds) annually. The ministry has also overseen the establishment of the National Debt Management Center (NDMC), which manages the Kingdom’s sovereign debt portfolio and optimizes borrowing costs.

Key Facts

FactDetail
Key FunctionsBudgeting, fiscal policy, debt management, revenue collection
Budget SizeSAR 1.1+ trillion annually
Revenue SourcesOil, VAT, excise, expatriate levies, investment income
Debt ManagementNational Debt Management Center (NDMC)
Fiscal FrameworkFiscal Balance Program
Bond/Sukuk IssuanceActive in international and domestic markets

Role in Vision 2030

The Ministry of Finance is the fiscal backbone of Vision 2030, managing the delicate balance between funding the enormous capital requirements of the transformation programme and maintaining fiscal sustainability. The ministry’s success in diversifying revenue through VAT, managing sovereign debt levels, and allocating budgets efficiently to Vision Realization Programs directly determines the pace and scale of reform delivery.

MoF’s fiscal management also underpins Saudi Arabia’s credit ratings and access to international capital markets, which are essential for financing the hundreds of billions of dollars in Vision 2030 infrastructure and gigaproject investments.