Arab News

Human capital ‘key challenge’ for tourism sector

- Anan Tello Riyadh

Developing human capital is a key challenge for Saudi Arabia’s travel sector, the country’s tourism minister has said on Sunday. Ahmed Al-Khateeb, speaking during a two-day meeting of the World Economic Forum in Riyadh, discussed the Kingdom’s burgeoning tourism industry, which has boomed over the past half-decade.

To address the human capital challenge, the Saudi leadership has encouraged young people across the Kingdom “to join the sector,” he said. “We are spending a lot to train (young Saudi talents) and scale them, and involve them in the sector,” he told the “Vacationom­ics” panel discussion, adding that hiring local experts is essential for delivering better tourism experience­s. “You get the best experience and you know more about other people’s culture and other nations’ cultures when you deal and interact with locals,” he said. “We want to make sure that our guests are served by local people.”

Saudi Arabia has delivered “strong growth in Q1 this year, and we are moving to deliver our 2030 numbers,” the minister said.

The Kingdom’s tourism sector “has come a long way” since the launch of the National Tourism Strategy as part of efforts to diversify the economy, Al-Khateeb said, adding that the industry is “heading to achieve $80 billion this year” in private investment.

Last year, Saudi Arabia attracted about $66 billion in private investment into tourism. “We doubled the number of visitors coming from outside — 100 million in total … 77 million domestic (and) 27 million internatio­nal,” he said. “This is double the number that we achieved before we launched our National Tourism Strategy.

“We have the funding. We have a great country. We have everything that the internatio­nal tourists would like to see and experience.” Jerry Inzerillo, chief of the Diriyah Gate Developmen­t Authority, told the panel: “What the Gulf and its leadership will do in the next 10 years is going to be breathtaki­ng to allow people to come from all over the world.”

With “so much to do in the region,” Inzerillo said he believed the “warmth and hospitalit­y” of the Saudi people is serving as a strong selling point for tourism in the Kingdom.

 ?? AFP ?? Saudi Arabia’s minister of tourism, Ahmed Al-Khateeb.
AFP Saudi Arabia’s minister of tourism, Ahmed Al-Khateeb.

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