ABSTRACT

Saudi Arabia is one of the most controversial and least known of the Arab nations. A land of massive contrasts – between its densely populated cities and its vast expanses of desert; between the recent poverty of its villages and the massive wealth created by oil, which is drawing a labour force from most of the neighbouring countries; between the aggressive technocratic and industrial thrust forward and the strongly traditionalist Islamic basis of the ruling ideologies – it has progressed to world prominence in a matter of years after centuries of little or no change. The change is not so much a surge, or even a thrust, as a rush into the industrialized and wealthy world. This book analyzes the problems and achievements of Saudi development and provides the first detailed critique of the Third Development Plan.

First published in 1982.

chapter |2 pages

List of Figures

chapter |2 pages

Dedication

chapter |3 pages

Foreword

chapter 1|33 pages

An Overview

chapter 2|31 pages

The Economics of Oil

chapter 8|34 pages

Public Finance and Budgetary Policy

chapter 9|51 pages

Money and Banking

chapter 10|29 pages

International Trade

chapter 11|36 pages

Saudi Arabian Foreign Aid

chapter 12|32 pages

Business Trends and Potential