Expenses next year will reach 890 billion riyals (USD 237 billion) against revenues of 692 billion riyals (USD 184 billion), the cabinet said in a statement.
It said this year's deficit will be 297 billion riyals (USD 79 billion), down 8.9 per cent from 2016's budget forecast.
"This budget comes at a time of a highly volatile economic situation...And which led to a slowdown in world economic growth and a drop in oil prices that impacted our country," King Salman said on official television, with Finance Minister Mohammed Aljadaan seated nearby at a table of cabinet ministers.
Spending is expected to come in at 825 billion riyals for 2016, 1.8 per cent lower than foreseen.
The world's biggest oil exporter froze major building projects, cut cabinet ministers' salaries and imposed a wage freeze on civil servants in the wake of last year's record deficit of USD 97 billion.
Analysts said that figure was 15 per cent of gross domestic product, making it one of the largest in the emerging world.
The government made unprecedented cuts to fuel and utilities subsidies last year in a country long accustomed to some of the cheapest petrol prices in the world.
"Given the opaqueness of policy announcements, the budget will provide investors with an opportunity to gauge the government's commitment to fiscal austerity," London-based Capital Economics wrote in a pre-budget briefing.
Oil prices, which were above USD 100 a barrel in 2014, sank below USD 40 in 2016, but recovered towards the end of this year and traded today below USD 55.
The plunge in global oil prices led Riyadh to intensify economic reform efforts, which are being led by Salman's son, Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, 31.
At its heart is a plan to float less than five per cent of state oil giant Saudi Aramco on the stock market, with the proceeds helping to form what will be the world's largest state investment fund, holding about USD 2 trillion in assets.
The IPO could take place in 2018 and would be the biggest in history.
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