The
"One Way Burger" food truck in Riyadh is something of a rarity as its
cook is a Saudi
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Dishing out burgers and
fries slathered with melted cheese, "One Way Burger" is like any
other trendy food truck in Riyadh. But it offers something rare — the cook behind
the sizzling hot grill is a Saudi.
Bader
al-Ajmi began his food truck business in Riyadh amid a change in cultural
attitudes to work, as Saudi Arabia undergoes a major retooling of its lagging
economy
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In
the once tax-free petro-state, which long offered its citizens cradle-to-grave
welfare, blue-collar occupations such as cooking, cleaning and working at gas
stations have largely been the preserve of foreign workers, who far outnumber
Saudis.
But
Saudis are increasingly taking on such "low status" jobs in a new age
of austerity when gas is no longer cheaper than water, with the government
trimming oil-funded subsidies and tackling sluggish economic growth and high
unemployment.
"When
I started this food truck two years ago many people said: 'What? You will sell
burgers and sandwiches in the street? You come from a big family and big
tribe'," said Bader al-Ajmi, the 38-year-old owner of One Way Burger.
"People
were surprised," he added, as a Porsche pulled up at the side of his truck
to place an order.
Since
Ajmi started his business, dipping into his personal savings, owning a food
truck has become the trend du jour and attained a level of respectability.
Working inside as a cook apparently still has not.
Still,
many Saudis, long reliant on the welfare state for secure and undemanding
white-collar jobs, are embracing manual labour jobs.
For
the first time, a new crop of nationals are working as tea sellers and car mechanics.
Posh
Lexus-owners work as Uber drivers for spare cash.
"Will
Saudis ever work as street cleaners?" columnist Abdulhadi al-Saadi
recently asked in the daily Saudi Gazette.
"Some
people will look down at this proposal... They should know that nations only
rise on the shoulders of their own people," he wrote.
Last
December, residents of eastern Al-Ahsa region feted a handful of young Saudis
who swallowed their pride to do another job long deemed dishonourable — working
at a gas station.
"There
is no shame in this work," a gas station customer said in a Snapchat
video.
"Prophet
Mohammed used to work as a shepherd."
- 'We don't work for us'
-
It
remains unclear how many nationals have moved into blue-collar jobs but the
trend defies a popular maxim among Saudis: "They (expats) work for us, we
don't work for us."
"Saudis
are moving into jobs historically dominated by expatriate workers," said
Graham Griffiths, senior analyst at the consultancy Control Risks.
"The
social stigma surrounding certain types of manual or service-based labour has
been strong, but economic necessity is pushing many to take such jobs
regardless of their social status."
Cultural
attitudes to work are changing amid a major retooling of Saudi Arabia's lagging
economy, with the country seeking to wean citizens off government largesse as
it prepares for a post-oil era.
Nearly
two-thirds of all Saudis are employed by the government, and the public sector
wage bill and allowances account for roughly half of all government
expenditure.
Saudi
economist Abdullah al-Maghlouth said the new economy will push more Saudis to
become plumbers, carpenters and tailors, jobs that were acceptable decades ago
in the pre-oil boom era.
Meanwhile,
the government's push to replace foreigners with Saudi workers — a policy known
as "Saudization" — as well as a backbreaking expat levy are driving a
huge exodus of expats, who hold 70 percent of all jobs.
Official
statistics show nearly 800,000 foreign workers have left the kingdom since the
beginning of 2017, creating what business owners call a "hiring
crisis".
An
Indian diner said it was in trouble, unable to secure work permits for its
South Asian chefs, leaving its expansion plans in limbo.
The
exodus has sent the rental property market plummeting and cities like Riyadh
are dotted with empty storefronts and shopping malls amid slack customer
demand.
- 'Fake Saudization' -
Some
businesses implementing "Saudization" also complain of a high rate of
attrition and a displaced sense of entitlement among more expensive Saudi
workers accustomed to different economic realities.
A
manager at a refrigerator manufacturing plant that recently hired dozens of
Saudi assemblers and technicians said a handful of them were found
"sleeping in their cars during working hours".
Many
companies are reported to be circumventing the policy by paying Saudi workers
small salaries to sit at home, effectively creating bogus jobs in a malpractice
termed "fake Saudization".
The
contentious policy is not driving down joblessness among nationals.
Unemployment among Saudis rose to nearly 13 percent in the first quarter of
this year.
The
challenge, observers say, is not just to create more jobs for Saudis but also
to convince citizens to take them.
Flipping
sizzling slabs of meat inside his food truck, Ajmi said in the early days his
business was a one-man show. He did everything from dicing vegetables to
handling the countertop deep fryer.
He
has since hired two more Saudis and two Indian workers, but recruiting Saudis
willing to do the late-night job — from 9:00 pm until midnight — remains a
challenge.
A
dazzlingly lit coffee and dessert food truck parked next to his is also owned
by a Saudi, but the workers inside are all Filipinos.
Ajmi
said his success, which also spotlights the kingdom's nascent startup scene, prompted
him recently to buy another food truck emblazoned with the "Mercedes
Benz" logo — which has added a new veneer of respectability to the job.
"Many people... were
against the (food truck)," Ajmi said. "Now they say: 'If you have a
job, let me know.'"
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