A Saudi vendor waits for customers at a mobile shop in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia March 21, 2016. Reuters/Faisal Al Nasser |
Mobarak Musa, a mobile
telephone salesman from Syria, has spent 10 years working in Saudi Arabia,
sending part of his wages back home to support his parents and three brothers. A shift in Saudi labour
policy means he won't be able to do so for much longer.
Reuters
report continues:
In
early March, the Ministry of Labour announced that within six months foreigners
would be banned from selling and maintaining mobile phones and accessories for
them, in an effort to keep open more jobs for Saudi citizens.
So
Musa became one of hundreds of thousands of foreign workers in Saudi Arabia who
may lose their jobs and be sent back to their home countries this year, as low
oil prices slow the kingdom's economy and prompt the government to restrict
employment opportunities for expatriates.
"I
don't know where else can I go - I don't know any other job to do," Musa,
in his 30s, said in his small shop at a mobile phone market in downtown Riyadh.
Millions
of foreigners from south Asia, southeast Asia and elsewhere flocked to work in
Saudi Arabia during the economic boom of the past decade, filling relatively
low-paid posts in the oil industry, construction and services as well as many
middle-management and professional positions.
Foreigners
accounted for 10.1 million of the total population of 30.8 million in 2014,
according to the latest official data. The money they sent home was important
for their home countries; they remitted US$9.1 billion out of Saudi Arabia in
the third quarter of 2015, central bank data shows.
The
inflow of people may now go into reverse. Saudi economic growth is slowing as
low oil prices produce a state budget deficit that totalled nearly US$100
billion last year, forcing the government into spending cuts.
Many
analysts expect gross domestic product growth, which averaged over 5 percent
annually between 2006 and 2015, to fall well below 2 percent this year. Partly
because labour rules make it hard and costly to fire Saudi citizens, layoffs in
the early stages of a downturn tend to hit foreigners almost exclusively.
Meanwhile
the government, lacking the cash to create public sector jobs for Saudis as
freely as before, and worried that the official unemployment rate of 11.5
percent among them could rise, is intervening more heavily in the labour market
to push Saudis into jobs previously held by foreigners.
A
top executive at a major Saudi company told Reuters in January that he wouldn't
be surprised if one million foreigners had to leave the kingdom by the end of
this year.
"The
economic changes have started to pressure the labour market, and this has triggered
the start of the migration of a large segment of foreign workers," said
prominent Saudi economist Fadl al-Boainain.
"Declining
corporate profitability has made the foreign workforce a target for managements
seeking to cut fixed financial obligations."
CONSTRUCTION
So
far, layoffs have been concentrated in the construction sector, which analysts
estimate employs around 45 percent of foreigners. Hit by shrinking state
contracts and delays in payments owed to them by the government, construction
firms have been laying off tens of thousands of people since last year.
"After
12 years in a stable job with a big company, I have started to update my CV and
send it to other employers," said Abu Fadi, a Palestinian-Lebanese
engineer at a big construction company in Riyadh which is facing a liquidity
crunch and hasn't paid salaries to its staff since September.
Abu
Fadi, who has delayed his marriage plans until his future is clearer, said some
of his colleagues who had brought their families to the kingdom were now unable
to pay the rent. Some 5,000 technical workers at his company have left, he
said.
Job
losses among foreigners look likely to spread to other sectors, partly because
of government policy. Labour ministry spokesman Khaled Abalkhail said the ban
on mobile phone sellers would affect about 20,000 workers, and that similar
action would eventually be taken in other industries.
"The
labour ministry targets aim to create jobs for around 1.3 million
Saudis...There are plans for gradual nationalization of other sectors such as
taxis, travel and tourism, real estate, jewellery and vegetable markets,"
he told Reuters.
Abalkhail
said displaced foreign workers could try to find jobs in other sectors. But it
will be hard for many do so in a slowing economy, and many lack training for
skilled jobs. If they cannot find a company to sponsor a work visa for them,
they will have to leave the country within about 90 days.
Even
some highly paid foreign professionals are considering leaving the kingdom
because they see fewer opportunities as the flow of oil money shrinks.
After
more than nine years in Saudi Arabia, a British petrochemical consultant in the
oil-producing Eastern Province said he was considering returning home as
projects in the industry were postponed and budget approvals were delayed.
"Last
year was mostly fine, but the end of last year and this year are the worst I
have seen," he said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to discuss the economic prospects of his firm.
A
year ago, there were long waiting lists for foreigners seeking to move into
residential compounds for well-off expatriates in Riyadh and oil-producing
Eastern Province. The waiting lists have now shrunk or disappeared, and more
villas in the compounds are vacant, residents say.
"Saudi Arabia
continues to decline as a top destination for expatriates...given the country's
higher dependence on oil revenues and the extent of planned austerity
measures," Gulf Talent, an online recruitment portal for professionals,
said in a report this month.
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