The National - News

SIZE OF GCC CONSULTING MARKET SET TO TOP $4bn THIS YEAR

▶ Region’s diversific­ation push driving up volume of work and its complexity

- AARTI NAGRAJ

The GCC consulting market is expected to exceed $4 billion in revenue this year, posting a market growth of about $1 billion in two years as regional economies start to put in place major “transforma­tional” projects to support their diversific­ation efforts.

The region’s consulting market grew by 15.9 per cent last year to $3.87 billion, with double-digit growth recorded in every sector, the latest annual report by Source Global Research found.

Saudi Arabia’s consulting market, the largest in the GCC, grew faster than the overall market last year, expanding by 17.5 per cent, with revenue reaching a record $2.1 billion.

“The region’s economic ambitions, compounded by favourable oil prices, mean that both the volume of work and its complexity are rapidly increasing, especially in the field of digital and organisati­onal transforma­tion,” said Dane Albertelli, research analyst at Source.

“This is the main reason why 78 per cent of clients in the region say their use of consultant­s will increase in the coming 12 months. With long-term economic plans such as Vision 2030 reaching the implementa­tion phase, we’re once again expecting double-digit growth in 2023, but with a slightly gentler uplift than in 2022, with strategy and technology services continuing to be the key demands.”

The GCC region’s economies rose sharply last year, with higher oil prices and improving tourism and travel supporting growth. Saudi Arabia, the Arab’s world’s largest economy, recorded the highest annual growth rate among the world’s 20 biggest economies last year, according to the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t.

The country’s economy expanded by 8.7 per cent last year on higher oil prices and the strong performanc­e of its non-oil private sector. The kingdom is in the middle of a major economic diversific­ation drive under its Vision 2030 agenda, amid a push to reduce its reliance on oil and tap into other high-growth industries to boost its economy, create more jobs and attract private investment.

Meanwhile, the UAE’s economy grew by 7.6 per cent last year, the highest in 11 years, according to the country’ Central Bank. The Arab world’s second-largest economy is expected to expand by 3.9 per cent and 4.3 per cent this year and the next, the regulator said in March.

The World Bank estimates that the six-member bloc grew by an estimated 7.3 per cent in terms of gross domestic product last year, buoyed by the increase in oil prices.

The UAE recorded the second-highest growth rate in the consulting market last year, expanding by 14.3 per cent while revenue hit $841 million, Source said. It was followed by Qatar and Oman, both of which grew by 14.2 per cent, Bahrain with an expansion of 13.8 per cent and Kuwait, which grew by 13.7 per cent.

In terms of sectors, the consulting market for financial services, which forms a significan­t part of the region’s economy, rose by 15.4 per cent annually to $1.1 billion last year as work was mainly concentrat­ed on technology and investment, the report said.

Public sector consulting last year also rose by 15.4 per cent to $982 million as “GCC member states channelled their sovereign wealth funds into initiative­s to ease their reliance on the fossil fuel economy”.

Similar to the previous year, cyber security consulting services grew at the fastest pace, rising by 19.4 per cent to $362 million last year.

“Although falling back from the extreme growth rates of the last two years, Source expects this service to grow the strongest in 2023 as a result of the wider focus by clients on technologi­cal transforma­tion,” the report said. “As cyber security is an area in which clients particular­ly struggle to recruit, it’s a strong growth market for consultanc­ies to exploit.”

The report also found that technology companies are in high demand, with 62 per cent of clients expecting to make more use of them in the coming 12 months.

“This aligns with clients’ key objectives: Increasing investment in their technology infrastruc­ture and capabiliti­es. A good technology offering from a firm is, therefore, crucial for obtaining work on large projects in the region,” it said.

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