Business Standard

Women drivers seen reviving Saudi car market

Hired- driver services like Uber could see a drop in demand

- JEFF GREEN & JAMIE BUTTERS

The ultraconse­rvative kingdom of Saudi Arabia has issued an order allowing women to drive, ending a long-standing policy that’s cast an unflatteri­ng light on the country’s treatment of women. It’s also a royal opportunit­y for global automakers eager to make further inroads into the West Asia’s biggest economy.

Saudi Arabia’s move to open up its auto market to about half of its 32 million total population will have a profound impact on vehicle demand, driving habits and even immigratio­n patterns in a country where low-wage immigrants from Bangladesh and the Philippine­s often work as hired drivers.

Market leaders such as Toyota Motor and Hyundai Motor, whose hulking sport utility vehicles are a fixture on Saudi roadways, may need to boost inventory of smaller models such as compacts and sedans for single working women and female students, analysts say. On the flip side, app-driven, hired driver services like Uber Technologi­es could experience a drop in demand, as more women buy their own cars and get behind the wheel.

The change by King Salman bin Abdulaziz to issue driver’s license to women starting June is the latest twist in a far larger effort to modernise and economical­ly diversify the kingdom and lessen the economy’s dependence on oil.

Activists have repeatedly defied the ban, launching campaigns in which women have been filmed getting behind the wheel illegally. Saudi Arabia is the last country in the world to be lifting such restrictio­ns.

“This is very exciting,” said Rebecca Lindland, an analyst with car-shopping website Kelley Blue Book, who worked in Saudi Arabia for more than two years. “It’s not going to be without obstacles, but it’s a huge step forward in terms of Saudi Arabia recognizin­g the contributi­ons that women can make to the economy.”

Japanese automaker Toyota accounted for 32 per cent of the 676,000 vehicles sold in Saudi Arabia last year, while South Korea’s Hyundai ranked second with 24 per cent market share, according to Jeff Schuster, an analyst with LMC Automotive. The country ranks 21st out of the 198 markets the researcher tracks, he said.

Toyota signed an agreement in March to conduct a feasibilit­y study on local production in the kingdom. Nissan Motor and Hyundai were also in early stages of talks to open local plants, Asharq Al-Awsat reported in June, citing an interview with a Saudi minister.

US manufactur­ers have a big opportunit­y if they can appeal to Saudi women’s tastes in fashion and technology with culturally sensitive marketing on television and on social media, said Nahed Eltantawy, a professor of journalism at High Point University in North Carolina, who has edited a book on women and media in the Middle East.

“Given that a lot of women will be travelling with kids, any advertisin­g for family cars and vans to help with the children in the back would be helpful,” she said. “They need to offer diverse advertisin­g that caters to the diverse women in Saudi Arabia.”

The country has a young and growing population. The median age is about 27, and only about 8 per cent of the population is over 55, according to the CIA’s World Factbook.

Initially, the liberalisa­tion move may create road safety issues as new, inexperien­ced drivers navigate Saudi Arabia’s streets, Lindland said. This could blunt the negative impact on ride-sharing services like Uber, at least at first.

 ?? PHOTO: ISTOCK ?? Toyota accounted for 32 per cent of the 676,000 vehicles sold in Saudi Arabia last year
PHOTO: ISTOCK Toyota accounted for 32 per cent of the 676,000 vehicles sold in Saudi Arabia last year

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