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Unlike the West, the Gulf prefers rational debate to culture wars – and it works

- MUSTAFA ALRAWI Mustafa Alrawi is a columnist for The National

In my mind, the so-called culture wars that took on mainstream awareness in the wake of the Brexit vote in the UK and Donald Trump’s election as US president (both in 2016), are another way of describing a collective need to feel more secure in a world that is – to appearance­s, at least – increasing­ly unpredicta­ble.

The recent public debates about political correctnes­s, diversity, immigratio­n, history and national pride are the offspring of the introspect­ion in the West, after 9/11, arising from the War on Terror and the invasion of Iraq. Essentiall­y it is a continuati­on of the redefiniti­on of what it means to be a liberal society in the 21st century. The financial crisis represente­d a kind of watershed and an evolution in this process. Side by side with the creeping realisatio­n that future generation­s would not, for once, be able to count on being more well-off than their predecesso­rs, was a sense that globalisat­ion and federalism had taken away an individual’s power to shape the world they lived in.

Until the crisis, people assumed that if they could become wealthier, own their own home and give their children access to education and health care, then all would be well. Then just as this paradigm was crumbling, technology leapt forward to give any person more agency as an individual, separate from wider society, than they ever had before.

Give an angry person a megaphone and you see what happens. Technology companies have achieved a scale that has overshadow­ed government­s, meaning any genuine momentum to tackle the economic malaise drifted. So, we are stuck in a never-ending loop, trying to talk the angry person down, but by focusing on their loud voice we continue to be distracted from actually fixing any problems.

The polling company Focaldata conducted research across the UK, US, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherland­s, Sweden and Ireland on the rise of the far right and social issues that come with clear economic trade-offs such as immigratio­n and the push to net-zero carbon emissions. Focaldata’s James Kanagasoor­iam has labelled this “culturenom­ics”.

He wrote in The Times this month: “The tussle for supremacy over Britain’s institutio­ns, history and identity seems endless. In a parallel world, a separate conversati­on takes place about Britain’s doom loop of high interest rates, high inflation, low rates of housebuild­ing, creaking public services and low birth rate. The exam question in this other world is: how do we become rich again?

“These debates – heart and head – have tended to be conducted semi-independen­tly. But there’s good evidence now that the next phase of our politics is going to involve an uncomforta­ble fusion of Britain’s cultural and economic clashes. Culturenom­ics, if you will. And that this will have a stronger influence on how we vote than purely economic or social issues in isolation.”

It is fascinatin­g to stop and consider that in 2024 any major issue could be decided without properly factoring in the economic ramificati­ons. But that is what has been happening for nearly a decade. The promise that this is now changing is an exciting thought. Regardless of our feelings, when we allow ourselves room to understand who might have to pay the bill for our decisions, emotions tend to dampen enough to have a more rational discussion.

Typically, investors are put off by negative sentiment just as much as by an unattracti­ve rate of return. To become rich again, or at least to have the opportunit­y to do so, requires extra funding. Otherwise how can job and wealth creation hope to be kindled?

The Gulf, and the UAE in particular, is having a moment where investors are attracted by both a welcoming landscape and the potential for making money. It is no coincidenc­e that the majority of debates, cultural or otherwise, that happen in this region – in private and public – will usually put economic opportunit­y and cost high on the agenda.

This has been driven, in part, by the necessity of diversifyi­ng away from a reliance on oil and gas revenues. Another reason has been the need to attract talent and capital in a highly competitiv­e global marketplac­e.

The region is always starting on the back foot because of a less-than-perfect understand­ing of the day-to-day, on-theground realities on the part of those living outside. The news headlines – especially this month – describe a Middle East that is riven by conflict and instabilit­y. We who live here know that is a simplistic analysis. However, perception is also reality.

To overcome the inherent discount applied by investors simply because of the location of Gulf countries like the UAE, the outcome of the culturenom­ics applied in the region must always be powerfully compelling and primarily lucrative, rather than – in the West’s definition of the word – populist.

It is no coincidenc­e the majority of debates in this region will usually put economic opportunit­y high on the agenda

 ?? EPA ?? Public debates about immigratio­n and such are the offspring of the introspect­ion in the West
EPA Public debates about immigratio­n and such are the offspring of the introspect­ion in the West
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