Foreign Workers Are Leaving Saudi Arabia By The Thousands

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https://www.bloomberg.com/news/vide...e-leaving-saudi-arabia-by-the-thousands-video

Saudi Arabia’s expatriate workers are leaving the kingdom by the thousands, and the exodus may not yet be over.

As companies struggle with slower business and authorities impose more fees on foreigners, the biggest Arab economy is losing some of its allure to expats who once flocked to a country awash with petrodollars.

The number of foreign workers declined by 6 percent to 10.2 million in the first three months of 2018 compared with a year ago, taking the cumulative drop over the five past quarters to about 700,000, according to official data released this month. The losses in the first quarter were in sectors including construction -- usually dominated by low-cost laborers -- as well as trade and manufacturing.

But the data also show unemployment among Saudi nationals rising slightly to 12.9 percent, underscoring the struggle to create jobs as the economy slowly recovers from the worst economic slowdown since the financial crisis in 2009.

Creating jobs for Saudis is a priority for Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the driving force behind the country’s plan to reduce its dependence on oil. Under the National Transformation Program, the government targeted an unemployment rate of 9 percent by 2020, according to data on the website of the program.

“We are expecting the rate of job losses for expats to remain elevated over the course of the year,” Mohamed Abu Basha, an economist at investment bank EFG-Hermes in Cairo, wrote in a report. He attributed the forecast to rising fees, efforts to nationalize jobs and the “weak” economic backdrop.

The government started imposing a 100 riyals ($26.70) a month on expat dependents in July 2017. The fee is set to reach 400 riyals a month in July 2020.

Gross domestic product grew 1.2 percent in the first three months compared with a year ago, the first expansion in five quarters, as oil prices increased. Private-sector growth, however, remained muted at 1.1 percent.

As the kingdom emerges from last year’s recession, job creation will likely lag behind the economic recovery, said John Sfakianakis, director of economic research at the Gulf Research Center.

“Dependents fees for lower income expatriates as well as greater efforts to nationalize the workforce make it less economically opportune for foreign workers.”

Authorities, however, could relax some of the rules.

According to Al Watan newspaper, the government may revise plans that ordered most retail businesses to replace all foreign workers with Saudis, reducing the percentage of nationals to 70 percent.
 
Arabs are lazy bums, they don't want to work, just wanna eat. Oil future is doomed, the electric car is taking over.
 

Thegoodshepherd

Galkacyo iyo Calula dhexdood
VIP
They tried Saudization before and it failed miserably. Saudi nationals simply do not have the education necessary to run a modern economy, nor do they have the will. They see manual work as degrading and want office jobs in which they can sulk and maybe do 1 hour of work a day.

They have had 70 years to industrialize on the back of the free money they have been receiving, and they have failed. Their society is shit and deserves to collapse.
 

Basra

LOVE is a product of Doqoniimo mixed with lust
Let Them Eat Cake
VIP
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/vide...e-leaving-saudi-arabia-by-the-thousands-video

Saudi Arabia’s expatriate workers are leaving the kingdom by the thousands, and the exodus may not yet be over.

As companies struggle with slower business and authorities impose more fees on foreigners, the biggest Arab economy is losing some of its allure to expats who once flocked to a country awash with petrodollars.

The number of foreign workers declined by 6 percent to 10.2 million in the first three months of 2018 compared with a year ago, taking the cumulative drop over the five past quarters to about 700,000, according to official data released this month. The losses in the first quarter were in sectors including construction -- usually dominated by low-cost laborers -- as well as trade and manufacturing.

But the data also show unemployment among Saudi nationals rising slightly to 12.9 percent, underscoring the struggle to create jobs as the economy slowly recovers from the worst economic slowdown since the financial crisis in 2009.

Creating jobs for Saudis is a priority for Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the driving force behind the country’s plan to reduce its dependence on oil. Under the National Transformation Program, the government targeted an unemployment rate of 9 percent by 2020, according to data on the website of the program.

“We are expecting the rate of job losses for expats to remain elevated over the course of the year,” Mohamed Abu Basha, an economist at investment bank EFG-Hermes in Cairo, wrote in a report. He attributed the forecast to rising fees, efforts to nationalize jobs and the “weak” economic backdrop.

The government started imposing a 100 riyals ($26.70) a month on expat dependents in July 2017. The fee is set to reach 400 riyals a month in July 2020.

Gross domestic product grew 1.2 percent in the first three months compared with a year ago, the first expansion in five quarters, as oil prices increased. Private-sector growth, however, remained muted at 1.1 percent.

As the kingdom emerges from last year’s recession, job creation will likely lag behind the economic recovery, said John Sfakianakis, director of economic research at the Gulf Research Center.

“Dependents fees for lower income expatriates as well as greater efforts to nationalize the workforce make it less economically opportune for foreign workers.”

Authorities, however, could relax some of the rules.

According to Al Watan newspaper, the government may revise plans that ordered most retail businesses to replace all foreign workers with Saudis, reducing the percentage of nationals to 70 percent.


"But the data also show unemployment among Saudi nationals rising slightly to 12.9 percent"



HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA H



Joke!!!!! Since when do Saudi born citizens work??? That's why they had the foreigners working !! Helllooooo!


I think now, they are trying to kick foreigners out and make their own citizen get a job so that they can STOP the oil money hand out welfare that was fed to them for years.
 

Muji

VIP
They’re trying to invest their money in businesses outside of Saudi like Uber. Anything to get out of manual work ey.
 
Arabs are ungrateful and dumb! when they foreigners leave after being paid little, overtaxed and racially abused. They will have no one to clean up their mess and their economy will collapse since the bottom of the economic pyramid will disappear. They really though white master was gonna let them outlast gaddafi by another 50yrs.

:mjlol:
 
Somalis have shifted their views on Saudi, you used to hear people blessing Saudis because it’s the prophets people, now everyone’s cursing them , it’s because more people are getting to know wahhabis danger
 
Somalis have shifted their views on Saudi, you used to hear people blessing Saudis because it’s the prophets people, now everyone’s cursing them , it’s because more people are getting to know wahhabis danger
I feel like they mixed more with the persians and syrians and that the real banu hashim are in hiding somewhere. These ppl are to wicked and worship devils like israelis and the other leaders. They sold out! also if you look at the history the prophet's family were being assasinated and murdered from the beginning of his death (watch the arrivals series he highlights it really well how they killed most of his male family members). These ppl took over arabia and are like that kawarij that killed imam hussein, the prophet's family never controlled the khilafa after abu bakr died as others got greedy and wanted to rule for themselves (yazid the shia beheaded hussein).

Wake up! they either sell out or end up like gaddafi.

trump-saudi-arabia-650_650x400_41495446510.jpg
gaddafi.jpg
 
Saudi is so afraid of Iran returning to the oil market because they need this oil price to hold back a rebellion within and against the royal family
 

Saalax Bidaar

Truthfulness so often goes with ruthlessness
They tried Saudization before and it failed miserably. Saudi nationals simply do not have the education necessary to run a modern economy, nor do they have the will. They see manual work as degrading and want office jobs in which they can sulk and maybe do 1 hour of work a day.

They have had 70 years to industrialize on the back of the free money they have been receiving, and they have failed. Their society is shit and deserves to collapse.
Insha Allah Saudi Arabia will collapse. Anyone stupid enough deserves it. They are planning to reduce their dependence on oil when they should have thought about that years and years ago.
 
Saudi Arabia has recently begun implementing a Saudi arabization of its organizations, these hit pieces can not stop an important geopolitical ally of Arabia.
 

Basra

LOVE is a product of Doqoniimo mixed with lust
Let Them Eat Cake
VIP
the world is definitely turning upside down. It is on the favor of the People more than institutions. The world is placing itself into a 180% degree angle that favors the up rise of poor people. Africa is mobilizing, and Europe is mixing with Immigrants, Saudi Arabia is waking up from laziness, the world is positioning itself into a new global middle class position. But a storm has to come before this realization
 
the world is definitely turning upside down. It is on the favor of the People more than institutions. The world is placing itself into a 180% degree angle that favors the up rise of poor people. Africa is mobilizing, and Europe is mixing with Immigrants, Saudi Arabia is waking up from laziness, the world is positioning itself into a new global middle class position. But a storm has to come before this realization
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