Pakistan Today (Lahore)

SAUDI ARABIA IS SHOWING SIGNS OF FINANCIAL STRAIN AS ITS RELATIONSH­IP WITH THE US SOURS

- PATRICK COCKBURN

Hundreds of foreign hospital workers in Saudi Arabia, unpaid for seven months, went on strike this week and were blocking a highway in Eastern Province in defiance of the ban on strikes and demonstrat­ions in the Kingdom.

The employees’ anger was deepened by the belief that the same employer who has been holding back their salaries, regularly offers massive fees to attract internatio­nal singers to perform at his parties.

Things are not well in Saudi Arabia and this week there were two pieces of bad news. Hitherto, there have been protests like this by foreign employees suffering from the knock-on effects of cuts in state expenditur­e following the drop in the oil price. In work camps far out in the desert workers complain that, not only have they stopped receiving money owed to them, but they are no longer even receiving supplies of food and electricit­y.

But now cuts are extending to the public sector workers who are Saudi citizens, 70 per cent of whom work for the government. So far the austerity is limited, with lower bonuses and overtime payments and a 20 per cent reduction in the salaries of ministers, though those close to political power are unlikely to be in actual need.

There are political dangers in this strategy. In the oil states of the Middle East there is a trade-off between the spectacula­r wealth of a corrupt and autocratic elite and an extensive patronage system through which much of the rest of the native population plugs into oil revenues. Some $120bn, or half of government spending, went on salaries, wages and allowances in 2015.

With a Saudi budget deficit of $100bn in 2015, this haemorrhag­e of cash may not be sustainabl­e but will also be difficult to rein in. Large constructi­on companies like Oger and Binladen are having difficulty getting paid by the government, with Oger alone reportedly owed $8bn. South Asian constructi­on workers, who once regarded Saudi Arabia as an El Dorado, are going home after waiting for months for pay cheques that never come.

The woes of foreign workers, and even of the native public sector employees, are not necessaril­y going to destabilis­e an absolute monarchy like Saudi Arabia that mercilessl­y crushes dissent. The fall or destabilis­ation of the House of Saud has been forecast for decades with no real sign of the prediction coming true. What makes the present economic stresses more significan­t is that they come at a moment when Saudi political influence is visibly under strain in the region and the world.

Among those exempted from this

week’s benefit cuts are Saudi forces in Yemen, which may remind Saudis that they are still mired in a vastly expensive conflict there which their government entered voluntaril­y last year but shows no sign of winning. In Syria, the five-yearlong effort by Saudi Arabia, together with Turkey and Qatar, to get rid of President Bashar al-Assad, has likewise failed. In the decade-long Saudi rivalry with Iran, today it is the Iranians who look like getting the upper hand.

But a more menacing developmen­t than this may be facing the rulers of the Kingdom in the US. For so long the ultimate guarantor of the status quo in Saudi Arabia, the US is increasing­ly ambivalent or hostile towards its old ally. On Wednesday, the US Senate will vote on whether or not to override a presidenti­al veto preventing the families of victims of 9/11 suing the Saudi government. The measure is unlikely to become law, but it is a sign of the Kingdom’s ebbing influence where it really matters at a time of deepening troubles at home.

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