Gulf Arab states, where foreigners make up half the workforce, should give employment preference to their citizens over expatriate labour, a prominent member of the Saudi royal family said on Monday. "We should review our economic policies in a serious manner to build national economies that benefit their people and not the millions of foreign workers," Prince Turki al-Faisal bin Abdulaziz said at a conference on human resources in Abu Dhabi.
Prince Turki is chairman of the King Faisal Centre for Research and Islamic Studies. He is a former ambassador to Washington and London and before that spent more than 25 years as the head of Saudi Arabia's intelligence service.
"It's not understandable that there be one unemployed Gulf national in countries that receive millions of foreign workers," he said. The six countries of the Gulf Co-operation Council (GCC) have witnessed six-years of growth fuelled by a surge in the price of oil - their main source of income - triggering a construction and services industries boom that required millions of foreign workers.
The GCC comprises Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Foreign unskilled workers, mainly from south-east Asia, and skilled labour make up an average of 50 percent of the workforce in the Gulf Arab region, reaching as high as 92 percent in the United Arab Emirates and Qatar and 60 percent in Saudi Arabia.
"If these policies continue, we will no doubt become minorities in our countries," he said. "We, especially in Gulf Arab countries, are in one of the most dangerous regions. We suffer and will suffer from security, economic, social, cultural, and demographic problems if we do not tackle the situation," he said.
He did not specify what policies the governments should carry out. The Arab world's two biggest economies - Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates - along with the remaining Gulf countries have suffered from the global economic downturn as oil prices have lost more than 100 dollars since reaching an all-time peak of 147 dollars in July, 2008. Mega real estate projects have been put on hold or cancelled altogether, forcing many expatriates workers to leave the region after losing their jobs.
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