The National - News

SAUDI ARABIA TO REAP WINDFALL AFTER RESTRICTIO­NS LIFTED ON WOMEN DRIVERS

▶ Their increased participat­ion in the workforce will bring benefits as kingdom moves ahead with plans

- JOHN EVERINGTON

Saudi Arabia will reap an economic windfall following the lifting of restrictio­ns on women drivers next year, according to economists, with the resultant increase in female participat­ion in the country’s workforce set to significan­tly boost consumer spending.

“Independen­t mobility of women would definitely make it easier for them to enter and participat­e in the workforce,” Dima Jardaneh, head of Mena economic research at Standard Chartered.

Female participat­ion in the Saudi workforce stood at just 19 per cent in 2016, compared with 65 per cent for men, according to EFG Hermes.

“Increasing women’s active participat­ion in the economy, along the line of Saudisatio­n policies, would considerab­ly boost disposable incomes of nationals; thereby, providing considerab­le purchasing power in the economy,” the bank said in a research note yesterday.

Simon Williams, HSBC’s chief economist for CEEMEA, described the move as “symbolic of the push to modernise the Saudi economy, even if it’s also a reminder of how far there still is to go.”

“Practicall­y, the potential upside is real - Saudi women are already well educated, but participat­ion rates are low and this is an important step toward making it easier for them to work,” Mr Willliams told The National.

However Ms Jaradaneh said that it was unclear as to the exact impact the lifting of the driving ban would have, with other factors keeping women from entering the workforce also at play.

“It is difficult to pin down the quantum, as in comparison women already constitute circa 50 per cent of university students in Saudi Arabia,” she said.

“This would suggest that there are other factors aside from transport deterring women from the work place including the current social norms.”

Increased participat­ion of women in the workforce is a key part of Saudi Arabia’s National Transforma­tion Programme, which aims to raise the percentage of the country’s women in work to 28 per cent by 2020.

Ms Jardaneh said that all sectors of the Saudi economy would receive a lift, with retail and hospitalit­y firms especially likely to benefit.

The country’s banking and insurance sectors are set to receive a considerab­le boost as a result of the move, thanks to the increase in auto loans and insurance policies taken out.

Mr Williams said that the move would result in an increase of money circulated through the Saudi economy, due to a reduced reliance on non-Saudi drivers.

“As money currently spent on expatriate male drivers stays in the country rather than leaving the kingdom in remittance­s, domestic demand will get a lift, too.”

Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the billionair­e owner of Saudi conglomera­te Kingdom Holding, last year estimated that the average Saudi family spends 3,800 Saudi riyals per month on drivers, limiting family incomes.

“Retaining foreign drivers not only has the effect of reducing a family’s disposable income ... but also contribute­s to the syphoning of billions of riyals every year from the Saudi economy to foreign destinatio­ns in the form of remittance­s,” he told the BBC.

The prince on Tuesday hailed “the brave decision of the leadership” allowing women to drive.

Female participat­ion in the Saudi workforce stood at 19 per cent in 2016, compared with 65 per cent for men, according to EFG Hermes

 ?? AFP ?? The National Transforma­tion Programme aims to raise the percentage of the country’s women in work to 28 per cent by 2020
AFP The National Transforma­tion Programme aims to raise the percentage of the country’s women in work to 28 per cent by 2020

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates