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17 August 2010 By Abdul Rahman Al-Rashid I received negative responses to my article [Five
Decisive Years] about Saudi Arabia's developmental
five -year plan and the crisis of rising unemployment
amongst Saudi citizens, with people saying that I had
gone too far with regards to my belief that jobs are
scarce [in Saudi Arabia]. The truth is that the
presence of unemployment represents a genuine problem
and this is not something that I have made up,
official statistics confirm this, and the five-year
plan acknowledged this, stating that unemployment
rates have reached 10 percent, while there are
official statements from the Ministry of Labour that
acknowledge that the rate of unemployment amongst
educated women has reached 28 percent. However I was informed that this unemployment is
not all as a result of a scarcity of jobs. I was told
that there are a huge number of jobs available, but
that job-seekers reject these because they do not meet
certain specifications with regards to the nature,
location, or salary, of the jobs desired. These job
seekers want to be employed in air-conditioned offices
or in the military, and they consider service industry
or manual labour jobs to be shameful. The other issue
is that these job seekers want to be employed in their
city of residence, and refuse to take jobs that
require them to move to a different location. They
also want to start any job in question with a high
position and a good salary. This is why the vast
majority of companies prefer to employ foreigners,
which prompted the government to open the door to
foreign employment. All of these job-seekers want to work in cities, to
the point that cities are seeing a huge population
increase while small villages are dying out. The
majority of Saudi citizens are employed in office
jobs, and this has resulted in 8 million manual labour
jobs being given to foreigners. There is a cultural
flaw here, as the concept of work has changed. In the
recent past, Saudi Arabians worked as drivers,
cleaners, laborers, and farmers; they would travel to
seek work in Kuwait or Iraq or India, working simple
jobs in order to earn money for their families. However today, one of the most prominent features
of Saudi society is the presence of foreign workers
who play an essential part of daily life whether this
is undertaking household chores, or working in stores,
or on farms, or carrying out manual labour. There are
even some foreign workers who are working in
unnecessary jobs, for example there is the porter who
carries your luggage at the airport who is invariably
a foreigner; this is an unnecessary job! While the
person who lifts your luggage onto the x-ray machine
is also a foreigner working an unnecessary job, and
one that cannot be found in any other country in the
world! It is rare to find foreign domestic workers or
foreign drivers in the richer and more developed
countries, and if you do find them – working in
hotels, for example – they are usually local
nationals. While the majority of those working
fast-food restaurants are young people on school
holiday or at university, and they are not necessarily
from poor households, for in the majority of cases
their families have a higher financial income than
their counterparts in Saudi Arabia, but rather the
concept of work in their society means that they have
been brought up to shoulder their own
responsibilities. I have heard colleagues who are
researchers at university remark that westerners are
ungenerous and miserly for taking away their
children's pocket money and kicking them out of the
house after they reach adulthood, however the reality
is that do not understand the culture of others. The
heart of western culture is based upon the concept of
encouraging the youth to rely on themselves, and to
build their own futures, not to become dependent on
their families or society. Since childhood, they begin
planning and saving for their retirement, or the
possibility of disability, undertaking their full
responsibilities and working whether this is in a
petrol station or restaurant. Although we are all aware of the social problem
[caused by unemployment], I am also certain that in
the end the state is responsible for arranging the
market and guaranteeing the necessary balance, and one
of its duties is to encourage good habits and put in
place fair employment rules in the private sector
which do not harm citizens in terms of minimum salary,
health insurance, and pension. This is our society with all its good and bad
features, and the story goes that an adviser went to a
state official to complain about one of the country's
social customs. The official replied "what do you want
me to do? Import people from Sweden?" All we want is for people to act as their ancestors
did, not imitate the westerners or the Chinese; we are
talking about a million citizens who are out of work
and do not have an income, while more than 30 billion
dollars are going to foreign workers every year. Al Rashed is the general manager of Al -Arabiya television. He is also the
former editor-in-chief of Asharq Al- Awsat, and the leading Arabic weekly
magazine, Al Majalla. He is also a senior Columnist in the daily newspapers of
Al Madina and Al Bilad. He is a US post-graduate degree in mass communications.
He has been a guest on many TV current affairs programs. He is currently based
in Dubai. |