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Saudi Arabia attracts multinational companies.

 

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Mul­tina­tion­als that relo­cate their regional headquar­ters to Saudi Ara­bia this year with the aim of secur­ing luc­rat­ive gov­ern­ment con­tracts would be «likely» to receive tax relief said the king­dom’s invest­ment min­is­ter, as exec­ut­ives fear they could be taxed in more than one jur­is­dic­tion. Sev­eral said a key con­cern was that, in the absence of a tax­a­tion accord between Riy­adh and other Gulf states that could fall under the regional HQ’s over­sight, sub­si­di­ar­ies’ profits could be taxed twice. «So the moment you des­ig­nate that entity as your regional head office, all of your regional profits could then be tax­able in Saudi Ara­bia,» said one exec­ut­ive. Oper­a­tions out­side Saudi Ara­bia «will be taxed in those entit­ies’ coun­try of oper­a­tions.

They will not be inter­mingled or mixed with the regional headquar­ters,» he said. State-owned enter­prises, which dom­in­ate the eco­nomy, are set to spend hun­dreds of bil­lions of dol­lars on new projects over the next dec­ade, attract­ing mul­tina­tion­als to the king­dom. About 80 com­pan­ies, includ­ing Uni­lever and Siemens, have already been gran­ted licences to move their regional headquar­ters to the king­dom, with many expec­ted to be based in Riy­adh’s King Abdul­lah Fin­an­cial Dis­trict. In addition, Pep­siCo announced earlier this month that it had relo­cated its Middle East chief exec­ut­ive’s office to the king­dom.

The pro­gramme under­scored the grow­ing com­pet­i­tion with the UAE, which for years served as a regional hub for mul­tina­tion­als with its lais­sez-faire approach to busi­ness, socially lib­eral life­style and hub air­ports. To qual­ify as a regional HQ under the Saudi plans, the base must have over­sight of oper­a­tions in at least two other states. But Michael Bes­sey, of con­sult­ants Albright Stone­bridge Group, said the latest inform­a­tion from the invest­ment min­istry was that Saudi-based regional headquar­ters should serve as a base for the entire region.

www.sba.tax

Comments

  1. I'm curious to see how the UAE will react to this because I don't see them just allowing this to happen without doing nothing at all.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, that will be interesting to see. Also it's something to see companies like Unilever move to Saudi Arabia. They must have serious benefits to do so.

      Delete

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