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Education Transformation: A Catalyst for Economic Breakthrough in the GCC

Education Transformation: A Catalyst for Economic Breakthrough in the GCC
A picture taken on March 9, 2020, shows the closed entrance of a private school in the Saudi capital Riyadh. (AFP)
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Updated 08 September 2024

Education Transformation: A Catalyst for Economic Breakthrough in the GCC

Education Transformation: A Catalyst for Economic Breakthrough in the GCC

RIYADH: Education quality needs to be improved across the Gulf if the region is to truly unlock its economic potential, experts have told Arab News.

Leading figures from the World Bank and regional consultancy firms, together with a range of recent reports and studies, argue that it is not just access to schooling that needs to increase, but the standard of education.

A report from the World Bank in May highlighted that according to its Human Capital Index, a child born today in the Gulf Cooperation Council region is expected to reach only 62 percent of their full potential productivity, mainly held back by low education quality

Speaking to Arab News, Safaa El-Tayeb El-Kogali, World Bank country director for the GCC: “Improving the quality of education is critical for fostering long-term economic growth and prosperity in the GCC.”

GCC countries are currently undergoing a significant transformation, driven by the need to diversify their economies in response to rapid technological advancements and escalating regional and global challenges. 

This dynamic environment necessitates economies that are diversified and resilient, where knowledge and skills play a critical role, and El-Kogali said: “Quality education is critical for GCC countries in reaching their ambitious development goals.”

In recent years, governments across the region have made notable strides in expanding access to schooling and improving student learning outcomes. However, foundational literacy and numeracy skills still elude many students in the region, posing a major obstacle to human capital development and global competitiveness.

El-Kogali highlighted the importance of early investments in quality learning, saying: “Realizing the full potential of human capital in GCC countries requires smart and early investments in the quality of learning that children receive.”

Building solid foundational skills from an early age is crucial as they form the cornerstone of future learning and skills acquisition. Without this, children risk falling behind, becoming disengaged from school, and failing to acquire the advanced skills demanded by today’s labor market.

Effective teaching is pivotal in enhancing learning outcomes at all levels, making it essential to provide educators with the right knowledge and support mechanisms. 

“Education contributes to long-term development and prosperity by improving people’s well-being and labor market prospects, leading to better employment opportunities and higher wages,” added El-Kogali.

Education also boosts individual productivity, propelling economic growth and building resilient economies that can adapt to a constantly changing environment.

The potential of education to spur economic growth is only achieved when it is of good quality and improves relevant skills and knowledge. 

Increasing access to education is vital, but it is ultimately the skills people develop through high-quality education that determine its contribution to economic growth.

In a study conducted by El Mostafa Bentour for the Arab Monetary Fund in 2020, the contribution of human capital to GDP growth in 12 Arab countries was compared to Asian and OECD developed countries. 

It found that Arab countries fell short, especially when compared to OECD economies, where a 1 percentage point increase in human capital leads to a 0.9 percentage point increase in GDP. 

In contrast, the Arab world sees only a 0.5 percentage point increase, while Asian countries see a 0.6 percentage point increase.

A 2008 research paper published in Journal of Economic Literature also found that a 100-point improvement in standardized test scores is associated with a GDP increase of up to 2 percentage points. 

Academics Gabriel Heller-Sahlgren and Henrik Jordahl further extended this analysis to 2016, revealing a 1.3 percentage point increase in GDP per capita for each 100-point improvement in test scores. 

The role of private education

The GCC K-12 private education market is experiencing significant growth, driven by population increases, rising income levels, government initiatives, and a growing expatriate population. 

Increased awareness of the importance of primary education and the need for high-quality options are key drivers of this growth.

Mansoor Ahmed, executive director for healthcare and education at Colliers in the MENA region, told Arab News: “Government initiatives such as Saudi Vision 2030 aim to enhance the quality and accessibility of education.” 

Despite these positive trends, the market faces challenges such as high construction costs and the affordability of tuition fees, which limit accessibility for lower-income families. 

However, opportunities for growth abound through technological advancements, partnerships with international institutions, and the development of specialized education programs in areas such as science, technology, engineering, and mathematics as well as artistic endeavors. 

Mansoor Ahmed, executive director for healthcare and education at Colliers in the MENA region, told Arab News: “The GCC K-12 private education market presents a lucrative opportunity for investors, educators, and stakeholders aiming to capitalize on the region’s growing demand for high-quality education.”

Ƶ’s educational landscape

Among the GCC nations, Ƶ stands out due to its size and demographic trends. The Kingdom, with a population of 32.2 million in 2022, has a higher proportion of nationals compared to expatriates. This demographic reality suggests that K-12 education operators should focus primarily on Saudi nationals to attract sustainable demand, a Colliers report told.

Despite vast resources and investments, Ƶ has the lowest total student penetration rates in the region for private sector K-12 education, with only 15 percent attending such institutions.

Ƶ’s private education sector holds significant potential for growth, particularly by targeting the Kingdom’s nationals. The growing population and young demographics underscore the need for additional schools, with projections indicating that the school-going population will increase from 7.5 million to almost 9.4 million by 2030.

Opportunities are particularly on offer in second-tier cities such as Makkah, Madinah, and Al-Ahsa, as well as Abha, and Taif. 

These cities currently lack high-quality private schools but are undergoing major expansion plans, creating increased demand for K-12 education. 

The rise in white-collar expatriate populations and the opening of international branded schools in main cities are expected to drive the growth for private education.

Affordability remains a crucial factor, with average tuition fees in the GCC region and Ƶ ranging from $10,000 to $30,000 per annum.

According to Ahmed: “The sweet spot for international private schools would range between $15,000 to $20,000 per annum.”

The transformation of education in the GCC is paramount for unlocking the region’s economic potential.

By focusing on quality education, the region can build a skilled workforce capable of driving long-term economic growth and prosperity. 

This strategic investment in human capital is essential for the region to navigate the challenges of a rapidly changing global economy and to achieve its ambitious development goals.


Pakistan’s Air Karachi in talks with Chinese jetmaker for aircraft as it gears up for operations

Pakistan’s Air Karachi in talks with Chinese jetmaker for aircraft as it gears up for operations
Updated 26 July 2025

Pakistan’s Air Karachi in talks with Chinese jetmaker for aircraft as it gears up for operations

Pakistan’s Air Karachi in talks with Chinese jetmaker for aircraft as it gears up for operations
  • New airline is backed by 100 Pakistani businessmen who pooled $17.6 million in seed funding
  • Air Karachi is also exploring aircraft deals with Boeing and Airbus to launch domestic flights

KARACHI: Air Karachi, Pakistan’s new private airline in the making, has engaged the Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China (COMAC) for the supply of airliners to start its flight operations, the group chairman Hanif Gohar told Arab News on Friday.

Spearheaded by a group of leading businessmen from Pakistan’s southern port city, the airline is also negotiating with global aerospace giants like Boeing and Airbus for the acquisition of at least three passenger aircraft. It was launched in November 2024 by 100 stakeholders with Rs5 billion ($17.6 million) in seed money.

“We are talking with COMAC regarding the 919, as well as with Boeing and Airbus, to acquire the aircraft,” Gohar said, referring to a narrow-body passenger jet developed by China.

Business leaders in the South Asian nation have stepped up to fill the gap as the state-run Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) has become a liability for the cash-strapped government, which is now making a second attempt to privatize the national carrier.

“We will start our flight operations as soon as we reach an agreement with any of the suppliers, whoever comes first,” Gohar said when asked about the timeline to start operations.

Gohar, a business tycoon himself, expects a deal within the next month.

He said Air Karachi would initially fly three aircraft domestically, and the fleet would later be expanded with four more planes to start international flights within a year.

The idea to launch a business-backed airline was conceived to develop an entity that can operate with efficiency and financial autonomy amid growing challenges faced by PIA.

Last month, Air Karachi received its Regular Public Transport (RPT) license from Pakistan’s Civil Aviation Authority.

The airline has been modeled after the success of Air Sial, another private carrier launched by industrialists in Sialkot, the manufacturing hub of Pakistan’s exportable sports and surgical goods.


Gold falls on firmer US dollar and rising trade optimism

Gold falls on firmer US dollar and rising trade optimism
Updated 25 July 2025

Gold falls on firmer US dollar and rising trade optimism

Gold falls on firmer US dollar and rising trade optimism

BENGALURU: Gold prices fell on Friday, pressured by a recovery in the US dollar and optimism over progress in trade talks between the US and the EU.

Spot gold was down 0.7 percent at $3,343.0 per ounce by 1:50 p.m. Saudi time. US gold futures fell 0.9 percent to $3,344.50.

The US dollar index rebounded from more than a two-week low, making bullion more expensive for overseas buyers, while benchmark 10-year US Treasury yields rose.

A resurgence in risk appetite driven by optimism over potential tariff negotiations, and better-than-expected jobless claims reinforcing the view that the US Federal Reserve is unlikely to cut rates, is pressuring gold, said Ricardo Evangelista, senior analyst at brokerage firm ActivTrades.

“There is an element of uncertainty that still lingers ... with a strong support around $3,300, I see the potential for gold prices to rise should new episodes of volatility be triggered,” he said.

The European Commission said on Thursday a negotiated trade solution with the US is within reach — while EU members voted to approve counter-tariffs on €93 billion euros ($109 billion) of US goods in case the talks collapse.

Data showed the number of Americans filing new applications for jobless benefits fell to a three-month low last week, pointing to stable labor market conditions.

Meanwhile, President Donald Trump pressed Fed Chair Jerome Powell to lower interest rates in a tense visit to the US central bank on Thursday, less than a week before the next rate-setting meeting where policymakers are expected to hold interest rates steady.

Markets are pricing in a potential rate cut in September.

Gold typically performs well during periods of uncertainty and in low-interest-rate environments.

Elsewhere, spot silver fell 0.5 percent to $38.90 per ounce, but was on track for a weekly gain, up about 1.9 percent so far. Platinum lost 0.6 percent to $1,400.02 and palladium slipped 0.7 percent to $1,219.20. 


Saudi real estate loans up 15%, hitting $246bn

Saudi real estate loans up 15%, hitting $246bn
Updated 25 July 2025

Saudi real estate loans up 15%, hitting $246bn

Saudi real estate loans up 15%, hitting $246bn

RIYADH: Real estate loans by Ƶ’s commercial banks climbed to a record SR922.2 billion ($245.9 billion) in the first quarter of 2025, marking an annual increase of just over 15 percent.

Based on data from the Kingdom’s central bank, also known as SAMA, this expansion is the fastest year-on-year growth in nearly two years, and underscores a robust resurgence in property financing.

This was driven chiefly by a surge in lending to commercial real estate projects even as home mortgages, which still form the lion’s share, grew at a more moderate pace.

Saudi banks’ retail mortgages, which are primarily home loans to individuals, accounted for about 75.8 percent of total outstanding real estate credit in the first quarter, reaching SR698.8 billion.

This represents an 11.7 percent year-on-year rise. Corporate real estate loans — the funding provided to developers and commercial ventures — grew nearly 27.5 percent over the same period to SR223.4 billion, outpacing the retail segment’s growth several times over.

Although smaller in absolute terms, the corporate real estate portfolio has been expanding at its fastest pace in almost a decade according to SAMA data, boosting its share of total real estate credit to roughly 24 percent and signaling a significant shift in banks’ lending focus.

Drive to boost home ownership

This marked rebalancing comes after a prolonged period during which Saudi bank lending was largely fueled by residential mortgages. Over the past few years, government-backed housing programs helped drive home ownership from under 50 percent a decade ago to over 65 percent by 2024.

That mortgage boom saw banks’ loan books tilt heavily toward retail customers. Now, a structural pivot is underway. Companies and developers have become the dominant force in credit growth as banks pivot from consumer finance to funding large projects and enterprises.

Business loans across all sectors now make up 55.3 percent of Saudi bank lending as of May according to SAMA data, up from about 52.9 percent a year ago, with corporate credit growing over 21 percent year on year, more than double the 10 percent rise in personal lending.

Bank credit to real estate has accelerated in tandem with high-profile initiatives, from new residential communities in major cities to the gigantic NEOM smart city, as well as Red Sea tourism resorts and other large mixed-use projects that require substantial funding for land acquisition, construction and development.

The momentum is further bolstered by upcoming global events like the 2030 FIFA World Cup and Expo 2030, which are expected to inject capital and spur even more infrastructure and real estate development in the lead-up to those events.

This reflects massive projects such as new airports, rail lines, and ports that are moving ahead and require significant funding. The government’s National Transport and Logistics Strategy envisages about $150 billion in infrastructure investments by 2030, with 80 percent of that expected to come from the private sector via public-private partnerships.

Accordingly, banks are playing a pivotal role by lending to contractors and logistics firms involved in these ventures, ensuring that crucial projects have the financing they need.

Policy support and bank strategies

Saudi authorities have actively fostered an environment to support this lending shift toward commercial projects. Strengthening the real estate and financial sectors is a key goal of Vision 2030, and the government has rolled out measures to encourage private investment in large developments.

One major approach is the promotion of public-private partnerships and improved financing mechanisms to draw in non-government capital. The government is collaborating with banks and investors to streamline funding for mega-projects, including establishing new specialized financing companies and joint venture models that ease funding constraints.

The Private Sector Participation Law enacted in 2021 provides a transparent legal framework for domestic and foreign investors to take part in infrastructure and real estate projects alongside the public sector.

By simplifying regulations, offering incentives, and even initiating early phases of key projects itself, to demonstrate viability, the state aims to boost private-sector confidence and lending to these ventures.

These initiatives are creating a more conducive climate for banks to extend credit to corporate clients, knowing that many projects have government backing or facilitation.

At the same time, Saudi banks themselves are adapting their strategies to sustain the lending boom while managing risks. Banks remain well-capitalized and have robust capital buffers, with sector-wide capital adequacy around 19 percent according to SAMA data, enabling them to expand credit without compromising stability.

Many lenders are also exploring innovative ways to unlock liquidity and fund new loans. 

Industry analysts point out that banks are considering mortgage securitization, converting pools of home loans into bonds that can be sold to investors, as a means to free up balance sheet capacity.

A recent report by Fitch Ratings likewise noted that turning mortgage assets into tradable securities would expand Ƶ’s debt market and give banks an additional funding boost.

Such financial agility, combined with disciplined cost control and solid deposit growth, positions the banking sector to actively support the Kingdom’s development priorities and finance Vision 2030 initiatives on a larger scale.

Saudi interest rates, which move in tandem with US Federal Reserve policy, have risen to their highest levels in nearly two decades, a factor that might ordinarily cool credit demand. 

However, the strategic importance and expected returns of mega-projects mean that demand for credit remains strong even in a high-rate climate.

Many large-scale developments benefit from government guarantees or contracts that make bank financing viable despite higher interest costs, and banks are competing to syndicate and participate in these deals.


Oil Updates — crude steady as investors weigh trade optimism against potential Venezuelan supply increase

Oil Updates — crude steady as investors weigh trade optimism against potential Venezuelan supply increase
Updated 25 July 2025

Oil Updates — crude steady as investors weigh trade optimism against potential Venezuelan supply increase

Oil Updates — crude steady as investors weigh trade optimism against potential Venezuelan supply increase
  • EU says trade deal with US within reach
  • US prepares to allow limited oil operations in Venezuela, sources say

LONDON: Oil prices were steady on Friday, as trade talk optimism supported the outlook for both the global economy and oil demand, balancing news of the potential for more oil supply from Venezuela.

Brent crude futures were up 28 cents, or 0.4 percent, at $69.46 a barrel at 3:11 p.m. Saudi time. US West Texas Intermediate crude futures were up 27 cents, or 0.41 percent, at $66.30.

Brent was heading for a 0.3 percent weekly gain at that level, while WTI was down around 1.5 percent from where it closed last week.

Brent prices have been largely range-bound between $67 and $70 a barrel for the last month, since the sharp drop in prices in late June after de-escalation in the Iran-Israel conflict.

Oil prices are “caught in largely a holding pattern brought about by inconclusive specific oil drivers,” PVM analyst John Evans said.

Oil, along with stock markets, gained support from the prospect of more deals between the US and trading partners ahead of an August 1 deadline for new tariffs on goods from an array of countries.

After the US and Japan secured a trade deal this week, two European diplomats said the EU was moving toward a deal involving a baseline US tariff of 15 percent on EU imports, plus possible exemptions.

“Trade talk optimism appears to be offsetting expectations for stronger Venezuelan supply,” ING analysts wrote in a client note on Friday.

The US is preparing to allow partners of Venezuela’s state-run PDVSA, starting with US oil major Chevron, to operate with limitations in the sanctioned nation, sources said on Thursday.

Venezuelan oil exports could consequently increase by a little more than 200,000 barrels per day, which would be welcome news for US refiners, as it would ease tightness in the heavier crude market, ING analysts wrote.

Prices were also supported this week by disruptions to Black Sea oil exports and Azeri BTC crude loading from the Turkish port of Ceyhan.

“Delays in deliveries from the Russian terminal on the Black Sea and the Turkish port on the Mediterranean are likely to have contributed to the Brent oil price rising back toward $70. Now that exports are back to normal, support for prices is likely to ease,” Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch said.


Closing Bell: Saudi main index slips to close at 10,945 

Closing Bell: Saudi main index slips to close at 10,945 
Updated 24 July 2025

Closing Bell: Saudi main index slips to close at 10,945 

Closing Bell: Saudi main index slips to close at 10,945 

RIYADH: Ƶ’s Tadawul All Share Index slipped on Thursday, falling 38.13 points, or 0.35 percent, to close at 10,945.80. 

The total trading turnover of the benchmark index reached SR4.92 billion ($1.31 billion), with 112 stocks advancing and 137 declining. 

The Kingdom’s parallel market Nomu gained 120.10 points, or 0.45 percent, to close at 26,898.25. A total of 49 listed stocks advanced, while 24 retreated. 

The MSCI Tadawul Index also edged down, losing 3.66 points, or 0.26 percent, to close at 1,408.07. 

The best-performing stock of the day was Saudi AZM for Communication and Information Technology Co., whose share price surged 9.96 percent to SR29.14. 

Other top performers included Northern Region Cement Co., which saw its share price rise 6.29 percent to SR8.11, and Obeikan Glass Co., which climbed 6.20 percent to SR37.

Sport Clubs Co. recorded the most significant drop, falling 7.34 percent to SR10.22. 

Gulf Union Alahlia Cooperative Insurance Co. also saw its share price decline by 4.56 percent to SR14.22. 

National Medical Care Co. dropped 3.51 percent to close at SR164.80. 

On the announcements front, Electrical Industries Co. released its interim financial results for the period ending June 30.

According to a Tadawul statement, the company recorded a net profit of SR260 million during the first six months of the year, reflecting a 47.9 percent rise compared to the same period a year earlier. The increase in net profit was attributed to a broader product mix and higher sales of items with stronger profit margins. 

Electrical Industries Co. ended the session at SR8.99, down 2.21 percent. 

Alinma Bank also announced its interim financial results for the first half of the year. A bourse filing revealed that the company recorded a net profit of SR3.08 billion in the period ending June 30, up 12.8 percent year on year.

This increase was primarily linked to growth in total operating income. Net income rose as operating income expanded by 8.5 percent, driven mainly by higher returns from financing and investments, along with increased fee and foreign exchange income. 

The bank also announced the board of directors’ recommendation to distribute SR746 million in cash dividends to shareholders for the second quarter of 2025.

According to a Tadawul statement, the total number of shares eligible for dividends stood at 2.4 billion, with a dividend per share of SR0.30 after the deduction of Zakat. The dividend represented 3 percent of the share’s par value. 

Alinma Bank closed the session at SR26.38, down 1.60 percent.