Riyadh: audi Arabia on Monday cut taxes on oil companies in a
major move that could attract investments in its energy giant Aramco, expected
to be offered to investors in 2018.
King
Salman decreed a new set of income tax rates on oil companies working in the
kingdom, to range from 50 percent to 85 percent depending on the firms´
investments, after it was 85 percent across the board.
The
royal decree published Monday said companies investing more that 375 billion
riyals ($100 billion) will be subject to a 50-percent tax rate. "Saudi
Aramco´s tax rate is reduced from 85 percent to 50 percent, bringing it in line
with international benchmarks," the government-owned oil giant said on its
Twitter account following the decree.
Saudi
Arabia plans to sell five percent of Aramco next year, as part of efforts to
build up a large sovereign wealth fund. The sale falls within the kingdom´s
strategy to diversify its oil-dependent economy away from hydrocarbons.
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