Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
Saudi Arabia's petrochemical sector accounts for a significant portion of non-oil exports and has the potential to contribute significantly to the Kingdom's diversification. In this study, Autometrics —a machine learning method, was first employed to estimate export equations of chemicals and rubber-plastics for 1993-2020. The estimated equations were then integrated into a macroeconometric model called KAPSARC Global Energy Macroeconometric Model (KGEMM) and a scenario analysis was performed for the diversification effects of foreign and domestic price shocks till 2035. The scenario analysis showed that a 10% increase in foreign prices leads to 0.40 percentage point and 0.13 percentage point more diversified exports and economy on average for 2023-2035. Regarding domestic prices, a 19% increase in industrial fossil fuel prices and a 10% increase in ethane price result in less than a 0.1 percentage point contraction in the diversification of exports and economy if the revenues from the price reforms are not recycled back to the economy. The reforms can boost economic diversification by 0.05 percentage point if the revenues are recycled back to the petrochemical sector as an investment. If domestic price reforms are coupled with the investment in the petrochemical sector and 50% of this investment goods are locally produced, then diversification of Saudi export and economy enlarge considerably—by 0.20 percentage point and 0.26 percentage point, respectively.