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Middle EastSaudi Arabia

Saudi economy redraws ambitions—‘going local’ is the new buzz phrase 

By
Melissa Hancock
Melissa Hancock
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By
Melissa Hancock
Melissa Hancock
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June 10, 2026, 4:12 AM ET
After a decade of dizzying investments, Saudi Arabia is now focused on domestic priorities.
After a decade of dizzying investments, Saudi Arabia is now focused on domestic priorities.Didier Marti—Getty Images

The IMF’s decision last week to revise Saudi Arabia’s GDP for this year down to 2% from its 3.1% forecast in April was probably inevitable given the widespread retrenchment currently underway in the kingdom.   

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Last week, it emerged that the Public Investment Fund (PIF), the engine behind Saudi Vision 2030, was replacing foreign CEOs with local hires as part of its strategy to tighten spending and shift its focus toward domestic projects.  

The Financial Times, citing an advisor to the Saudi government, reported that the changes came after the fund conducted a review of all its portfolio companies, including how they will reallocate spending in the coming years. 

It follows on from the release in April of PIF’s new 2026–30 strategy, which it said “marks a natural evolution as PIF moves from a period of rapid growth and acceleration to a new phase of sustained value creation.”   

Earlier this week, Semafor reported that Neom’s budget for 2026 to 2030 includes 60 billion riyals ($16 billion) in anticipated payments to contractors to terminate long-term agreements. 

That means, for a time, the Saudi government will spend more money on canceling parts of the futuristic desert city gigaproject than it will spend building them.  

Dismissed by some as “mega-gimmicks,” many of Saudi’s most high-profile projects—including core elements of Neom—have already been watered down, frozen, or canceled.  

The scaling down of the Neom project came after a strategic review, which has led to layoffs and a corporate restructuring. 

The retrenchment of Saudi’s giga projects has been driven primarily by fiscal pressures. Riyadh projects a deficit of roughly $44 billion for 2026, following significant shortfalls in 2025.  

Speaking to reporters as part of a briefing in Riyadh at the end of last year, Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan said: “We have no ego—absolutely no ego,” adding that the kingdom is willing to defer or cancel projects within its Vision 2030 program “without blinking” if they no longer make economic sense or fail to deliver value.  

Concluding its visit to Saudi Arabia last week, the IMF said: “Looking ahead, priorities include improving the business environment, deepening capital markets, supporting small and medium enterprises, aligning education with labor market needs, strengthening governance, and scaling AI adoption while mitigating associated risks.” 

Saudi economy redraws ambitions - ‘going local’ is the new buzz phrase

The IMF’s decision last week to revise Saudi’s GDP for this year down to 2% from its 3.1% forecast in April was probably inevitable given the widespread retrenchment currently underway in the kingdom.   

Last week, it emerged that the Public Investment Fund (PIF), the engine behind Saudi Vision 2030, was replacing foreign CEOs with local hires as part of its strategy to tighten spending and shift its focus towards domestic projects.  

The Financial Times, citing an adviser to the Saudi government, reported that the changes came after the fund conducted a review of all its portfolio companies, including how they will reallocate spending in the coming years. 

It follows on from the release in April of PIF’s new 2026-2030 strategy which it said “marks a natural evolution as PIF moves from a period of rapid growth and acceleration to a new phase of sustained value creation”.  

Earlier this week, Semafor reported that Neom’s budget for 2026 to 2030 includes 60 billion riyals ($16 billion) in anticipated payments to contractors to terminate long-term agreements. 

That means, for a time, the Saudi government will spend more money on cancelling parts of the futuristic desert city gigaproject than it will spend building them.  

Dismissed by some as “mega-gimmicks”, many of Saudi’s most high-profile projects—including core elements of Neom—have already been watered down, frozen or cancelled.  

The scaling down of the Neom project came after a strategic review which has led to layoffs and a corporate restructuring. 

The retrenchment of Saudi’s giga projects has been driven primarily by fiscal pressures. Riyadh projects a deficit of roughly $44 billion for 2026, following significant shortfalls in 2025.  

Speaking to reporters as part of a briefing in Riyadh at the end of last year, Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan said: “We have no ego—absolutely no ego,” adding that the kingdom is willing to defer or cancel projects within its Vision 2030 program “without blinking” if they no longer make economic sense or fail to deliver value.  

Concluding its visit to Saudi Arabia last week, the IMF said: “Looking ahead, priorities include improving the business environment, deepening capital markets, supporting small and medium enterprises, aligning education with labor market needs, strengthening governance, and scaling AI adoption while mitigating associated risks.” 

Subscribe to Fortune Gulf Brief. Every Tuesday, this new newsletter delivers clear-eyed, authoritative intelligence on the deals, decisions, policies, and power shifts shaping one of the world’s most consequential regions, written for the people who need to act on it. Sign up here.
About the Author
By Melissa Hancock

Melissa Hancock is the author of Gulf Brief – Fortune's weekly newsletter which spotlights the investment trends and business opportunities that matter across the region. Melissa has specialized in covering the region for 20 years, during which time she has worked for a range of well-known publications including AGBI, MEED, Forbes Middle East and MEES. She also served as MENA Editor for The Banker, the FT’s monthly banking magazine.

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