The National - News

GCC consulting market goes past $3bn for first time as economic transforma­tion picks up pace

▶ Rebound last year came after the sector contracted by 1.5% in 2020

- AARTI NAGRAJ

The GCC consulting market recorded its fastest growth in seven years, rising almost 18 per cent last year to exceed $3 billion for the first time on the back of economic transforma­tion efforts in the region, according to a report by Source Global Research.

Despite volatile oil prices and Covid-19-related restrictio­ns lingering in the market last year, government efforts to move forward with mega projects such as Expo 2020 Dubai, the Fifa World Cup Qatar 2022 and Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 boosted demand across the consulting market.

The growth last year came after the consulting industry in the GCC contracted for the first time, by 1.5 per cent, in 2020.

“Our data shows that the GCC is recovering quickly from the pandemic. Almost half of the clients we surveyed in the Gulf region think that their organisati­ons have returned to normal after the pandemic, which is a significan­tly higher proportion than in other countries that we’ve analysed,” said Ashok Patel, market trends, content and strategy lead at UK-based Source Global Research.

“With greater optimism returning to the region and almost two thirds of client organisati­ons expecting to spend more on consulting support this year than they did in 2021, we’re forecastin­g another strong year for the region’s consultant­s.”

The GCC has rebounded strongly from pandemic-induced headwinds with higher oil prices and improving tourism and travel supporting the growth of the region’s economy.

The World Bank expects gross domestic product in GCC economies to grow at 4.5 per cent this year, buoyed by the increase in oil prices. But the rate is not expected to return to pre-pandemic levels until next year.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, meanwhile, estimates that the region’s economic growth will accelerate to 6.4 per cent this year, from 2.7 per cent last year, an upgrade of 2.2 percentage points from the fund’s October projection­s.

The upgrade “largely reflects upward revisions for Saudi Arabia (2.8 percentage points) and, to a lesser extent, other economies (Kuwait, Oman and the UAE), reflecting higher oil production in line with the Opec+ agreement, base effects and a recovering non-oil sector”, the IMF said.

The lender expects non-oil GDP in the GCC to expand 3.5 per cent to 4 per cent this year and the next, despite a gradual slowdown compared with 2021.

Saudi Arabia’s consulting market – the largest in the GCC – grew faster than the overall market last year, rising almost 19 per cent to $1.8bn, the Source Global Research report said. “Bolstered by resurgent oil prices, the Saudi government pursued its commitment to diversifyi­ng the national economy in line with Vision 2030 and took the next steps towards building Neom,” it said.

The UAE was the second biggest market in the region, with the consulting market growing by 16.6 per cent to $736 million last year.

“Long-anticipate­d events such as the pandemic-delayed Expo 2020 generated opportunit­ies for consultant­s of all stripes as the country geared up to showcase its strengths.”

In terms of sectors, pharma and biotech recorded the fastest growth last year, with consulting revenue up more than a quarter last year.

“Digitisati­on remained a key driver of demand as the region’s big pharma players sought to modernise their systems, boost the use of machine learning and automation in their R&D function and ensure remote working solutions were as efficient and effective as possible,” the report said.

The public sector also recorded an almost 20 per cent rise in revenue for GCC consultant­s last year, as government-led economic diversific­ation programmes drove demand for strategy expertise. “Clients leaned on consultant­s to update privatisat­ion plans for stateowned companies and boost investment in less well-developed sectors,” the report said.

Financial services and the public sector led the market in terms of overall revenue, followed by technology, media and telecoms.

Cybersecur­ity remained the fastest-growing consulting service, with revenue up more than 28 per cent to $303m last year, as new solutions were implemente­d in the region to protect increasing­ly digitised services, including online citizen services and portals.

“War-gaming and penetratio­n testing was also in high demand across the market as consultant­s were called upon to identify gaps in existing provisions amid ongoing concerns regarding the robustness of remote work protection­s,” the report said.

Demand for strategy consulting also rose across the GCC, with revenue rising more than 24 per cent to $838m last year, after about a 7 per cent contractio­n the previous year.

Looking ahead, 59 per cent of client organisati­ons surveyed in the report across the GCC said they expected to spend more on consulting support this year than they did last year.

“Although this proportion is marginally smaller than the 63 per cent who said this last year, it reflects Source’s overall view of 2021, that – leaving aside the impact of the war in Ukraine and consequenc­e of economic sanctions against Russia – 2022 will be another strong year for consulting services with growth rates only slightly lower than last year,” the report said.

Saudi Arabia’s consulting market – the largest in the GCC – grew faster than the rest last year, rising by almost 19%

 ?? Bloomberg ?? King Fahad Road in Riyadh. Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, among other regional mega-projects, helped to revive demand across the GCC consulting market
Bloomberg King Fahad Road in Riyadh. Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, among other regional mega-projects, helped to revive demand across the GCC consulting market

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates