The kingdom -- the biggest Arab economy and the world's largest oil exporter -- is facing an unprecedented budget crunch after crude prices dropped by more than half in a year to below USD 50 a barrel.
It has so far relied on its huge fiscal reserves to bridge the gap but Finance Minister Ibrahim al-Assaf said more measures would be necessary.
"We are working... To cut unnecessary expenditure," Assaf told Dubai-based CNBC Arabia in Washington, where he is accompanying King Salman on a visit.
"There are projects that were adopted several years ago and have not started yet. These can be delayed," Assaf said.
He said the government would issue more conventional treasury bonds and Islamic sukuk bonds to "finance the budget deficit" -- which is projected by the International Monetary Fund at a record USD 130 billion (117 billion euros) for this year.
The kingdom has so far issued bonds worth "less than 100 billion riyals (USD 27 billion/24 billion euros)" to help with the shortfall, he said, without providing an exact figure.
Saudi Arabia has projected an official budget shortfall for this year of USD 39 billion, but the IMF and other institutions believe the actual deficit will be much higher.
The IMF forecast in July that the deficit will be 20 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), while Saudi Arabia's Jadwa Investment firm said on Wednesday it expects the shortfall to be around USD 109 billion.
In 2014, Saudi Arabia posted a budget deficit of $17.5 billion -- only its second since 2002.
The reserves are expected to drop to USD 629 billion by the end of the year, Jadwa said.
Economic growth is expected to slow from the 3.5 per cent recorded last year, with the IMF forecasting in July that the Saudi economy would expand by 2.8 per cent this year.
It is forecasting 2.4 percent growth for next year.
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