SAUDI ARABIA

No better time to invest in KSA, says Justice Ministry

Unprecedented surge in business license applications cited

August 07, 2018

Saudi Gazette report

RIYADH
— The Ministry of Justice has announced that legal and regulatory reforms, the leaps forward in the commercial and labor-court systems in particular, have led to an unprecedented surge in foreign investment and applications for business licenses in the Kingdom.

Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority (SAGIA) data showed a 130 percent increase in the number of foreign-investment licenses granted in Saudi Arabia in the first quarter of 2018. It said the number of licenses rose to 157 from 68 during the same period a year earlier.

In 2017, a total of 377 new investment licenses worth SR5.7 billion ($1.52 billion) were issued. The Ministry of Justice credits the deluge of legal and regulatory reforms across the country for this surge. For example, foreign investors now have the right to 100 percent ownership of assets and businesses in the engineering, education and recruitment sectors. The time and effort required to secure a business license has also been drastically reduced.

The Kingdom’s commercial courts began operation in September this year, with three dedicated courts in Riyadh, Jeddah and Dammam. In addition, specialist commercial chambers within existing public courts also opened in several cities, as did a number of appeals chambers.

In October 2017, at the official launch of the commercial courts system, Justice Minister and Chairman of the Supreme Judicial Council Waleed Al-Samaani highlighted the “paperless court” project, which is estimated to have reduced procedural bottlenecks by 45 percent. He also noted that the ministry had shortened the execution lag of judicial orders from two months to just 72 hours, through the introduction of an e-link system that connects courts to related entities.

Commercial courts are set to be joined by specialist labor courts in early 2019. The Supreme Judicial Council has approved the establishment of labor courts in Riyadh, Makkah, Madinah, Buraidah, Dammam, Abha and Jeddah, in addition to 96 chambers across other cities, to serve the country’s 13-million-strong workforce. The ministry expects the forthcoming court system to invigorate the labor market, optimize the routing of skilled employees to key roles, further boost investment in the Kingdom, and significantly assist the achievement of Vision 2030 objectives.

Al-Samaani also pointed to the Kingdom’s enforcement of foreign rulings, citing a decision in May 2018 that upheld the verdict of a court in Virginia, US. A Saudi judge forced a national tourism company to pay a US firm SR14 million ($3.73 million). Following the May ruling, such recoveries by Saudi enforcement courts surpassed $3.4 billion, with some 400 applications still pending.

“Saudi Arabia is looking to the future, to 2030 and beyond, to the next century, and the next millennium,” said Farraj Al-Dossary, head of commercial court in Riyadh. “The Ministry of Justice has always taken the view that robust, reliable, pragmatic legal processes serve the continued prosperity of the nation. We are deeply proud of the enormous strides we have taken in our commercial courts and soon to be launched labor courts, as well as our e-link project that is eliminating paper and reducing legal-processing times across the Kingdom. We will continue to invest time and ingenuity to send a clear message that there has never been a better time to invest in Saudi Arabia.”


August 07, 2018
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