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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.â€

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.â€

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.â€

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.â€Â 

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.â€

º£½ÇÖ±²¥â€™s educational landscape

Among the GCC nations, º£½ÇÖ±²¥ 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, º£½ÇÖ±²¥ has the lowest total student penetration rates in the region for private sector K-12 education, with only 15 percent attending such institutions.

º£½ÇÖ±²¥â€™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 º£½ÇÖ±²¥ 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.â€

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.


º£½ÇÖ±²¥â€™s Jamjoom Fashion confirms listing on Nomu parallel market, eyes IPO

º£½ÇÖ±²¥â€™s Jamjoom Fashion confirms listing on Nomu parallel market, eyes IPO
Updated 24 August 2025

º£½ÇÖ±²¥â€™s Jamjoom Fashion confirms listing on Nomu parallel market, eyes IPO

º£½ÇÖ±²¥â€™s Jamjoom Fashion confirms listing on Nomu parallel market, eyes IPO
  • Company will offer 2.38 million shares
  • Listing to enhance Jamjoom Fashion’s profile, governance, and transparency

RIYADH: Saudi lifestyle retailer Jamjoom Fashion Trading Co. plans to sell a 30 percent stake in an initial public offering on the Kingdom’s Nomu parallel market, according to a statement on the Saudi Exchange. 

The company will offer 2.38 million shares, with the price range to be announced on Sept. 1. The subscription period for qualified investors will run from Sept. 1 to 4, and the final offer price will be set on Sept. 9. The shares will be listed on Nomu after regulatory approvals are completed. 

The planned listing follows steady earnings growth, with the retailer reporting SR540.4 million in revenue for the nine months to June 2025, up 14.3 percent, and net profit rising 17.1 percent to SR94.3 million. 

The listing comes as º£½ÇÖ±²¥ continues to develop its financial markets under the Vision 2030 transformation plan, which aims to diversify the economy and attract greater foreign investment. 

“The launch of the IPO is a crucial step in our journey so far,†said Founder and Chairman Kamal Osman Jamjoom. 

“It gives investors an opportunity to participate in a customer-focused industry that is unlike any other in our region, and one that has the potential to grow thanks to supportive government policies, macroeconomic conditions, and demographic trends,†he added. 

He also said the listing would enhance Jamjoom Fashion’s profile, governance, and transparency, supporting its next phase of growth by accelerating brand creation and expanding into new markets. 

Jamjoom Fashion, fully owned by Kamal Osman Jamjoom Trading Co., operates 218 stores across six Gulf markets, anchored by its flagship Nayomi lingerie and beauty brand, which generates about 84 percent of revenue, and its menswear brand Mihyar, contributing around 16 percent. 

Vice Chairman and CEO Stephen Holbrook said the IPO will serve as a “catalyst†for the company’s next growth chapter, enabling brand portfolio expansion, digital-first innovation, and a larger store footprint. 

The offering is being advised by EFG Hermes KSA, with Al-Rajhi Capital, SNB Capital, and Riyad Capital acting as receiving agents. The shares will be available only to qualified investors as defined by the Capital Market Authority. 

According to the company’s intention-to-float filing, Jamjoom Fashion plans to expand its e-commerce platforms, scale its loyalty programs, and introduce new brands to cater to changing consumer preferences in the region. 

It also aims to deepen its footprint in the Gulf Cooperation Council, where strong macroeconomic fundamentals and supportive government policies are driving growth in retail and lifestyle sectors. 


º£½ÇÖ±²¥ sees 28.8% rise in Chinese FDI to reach $8.2bn

º£½ÇÖ±²¥ sees 28.8% rise in Chinese FDI to reach $8.2bn
Updated 24 August 2025

º£½ÇÖ±²¥ sees 28.8% rise in Chinese FDI to reach $8.2bn

º£½ÇÖ±²¥ sees 28.8% rise in Chinese FDI to reach $8.2bn

RIYADH: Foreign direct investment from China into º£½ÇÖ±²¥ rose in 2024, with total Chinese FDI stock reaching SR31.1 billion ($8.2 billion), up from SR24.1 billion in 2023, a 28.8 percent increase.

Investment inflows jumped 164 percent year on year to SR8.6 billion, while net inflows more than tripled to SR7 billion, highlighting growing investor confidence in the Kingdom’s market and the strengthening economic partnership with China, according to the Saudi Press Agency.

The rise in Chinese FDI comes as º£½ÇÖ±²¥ intensifies efforts to diversify its economy under Vision 2030. 

Minister of Investment Khalid Al-Falih is leading a high-level delegation to China from Aug. 24-29. The visit falls under the Saudi-Chinese High-Level Joint Committee framework and the Joint Committee on Trade, Investment, and Technology, co-chaired by Al-Falih and Chinese Minister of Commerce Wang Wentao. The fifth meeting of this committee was held in May 2025.

Bilateral trade between the two nations exceeds $100 billion annually, making China º£½ÇÖ±²¥â€™s largest trading partner. 

Chinese investments are concentrated in manufacturing but also span financial services, insurance, construction, mining, technology, trade, infrastructure, and healthcare.

During the visit, discussions in Shanghai will focus on petrochemical and industrial value chains, while Beijing meetings will explore financial partnerships and collaboration with state-owned enterprises. 

The delegation will also visit industrial facilities and participate in capital market activities in Hong Kong.

The visit builds on previous milestones in bilateral cooperation, including the Saudi-Chinese Investment Forum in December 2023, which brought together 1,200 government and private sector leaders and resulted in over 60 memorandums of understanding across sectors, including energy, agriculture, tourism, mining, finance, logistics, infrastructure, technology, and healthcare.

Al-Falih also participated in the China-GCC Industrial and Investment Cooperation Forum in May 2024, attended by over 50 Saudi officials and business leaders.


º£½ÇÖ±²¥ issues 34 licenses for regional HQs in Q2: Investment Ministry

º£½ÇÖ±²¥ issues 34 licenses for regional HQs in Q2: Investment Ministry
Updated 24 August 2025

º£½ÇÖ±²¥ issues 34 licenses for regional HQs in Q2: Investment Ministry

º£½ÇÖ±²¥ issues 34 licenses for regional HQs in Q2: Investment Ministry
  • Over 125,000 services were delivered through investor outreach centers
  • MISA said it seeks to promote local opportunities and attract foreign investment

RIYADH: º£½ÇÖ±²¥ granted 34 licenses for regional headquarters in the second quarter of the year as part of its ongoing push to position itself as the Middle East’s leading business hub.

The figure was disclosed in the Ministry of Investment’s Economic and Investment Monitor for the second quarter of 2025. 

The report said more than 125,000 services were delivered through investor outreach centers, 59,000 online services via the ministry’s website, and 34,000 in-person services through comprehensive service centers during the same period.

Nearly 600 international companies, including Northern Trust, IHG Hotels & Resorts, and Deloitte, have established bases in º£½ÇÖ±²¥ since 2021, the Saudi Press Agency reported in March.
 
The surge is driven by the government-backed Riyadh Regional Headquarters Program, which offers a 30-year corporate tax exemption, withholding tax relief, and regulatory support, reflecting efforts to position the Kingdom as a regional business hub and attract multinational corporations to the capital, in line with Vision 2030 plans to diversify the economy beyond oil.

“MISA seeks to promote local investment and attract foreign investment. It also organizes and participates in a variety of events. In Q2 2025, MISA took part and organized seven local and international events in different fields,†the ministry said.

These included high-level forums and roundtable meetings with countries including the US, Kuwait, and Azerbaijan, as well as participation in the VivaTech conference in Paris and the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in Russia.

The platforms showcased the Kingdom’s investment opportunities and reinforced its commitment to global economic partnerships.

The ministry’s continued push to attract foreign direct investment comes as global FDI inflows declined by 4.3 percent year on year in the first quarter of the year, according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development.

Despite this, inflows to G20 countries increased by 33.5 percent, driven by key developing economies such as China and India.

The Ministry of Investment has also been instrumental in introducing new legislation to bolster investor confidence. Key regulatory developments include the establishment of the Saudi Investment Promotion Authority and updates to laws concerning civil aviation, food security, and real estate.

These legal reforms aim to create a safer and more competitive investment environment in the Kingdom.

º£½ÇÖ±²¥ ranked third among emerging markets in the 2025 FDI Confidence Index and maintained a top global position in several international indicators related to investment climate, entrepreneurship, and digital infrastructure.

According to the ministry, such strides contribute to the Kingdom’s long-term investment targets, including attracting SR388 billion in FDI by 2030, raising the private sector’s contribution to gross domestic product to 65 percent, and achieving a 7 percent unemployment rate. 


Oman will launch ‘Golden Residency’ program to attract investors

Oman will launch ‘Golden Residency’ program to attract investors
Updated 24 August 2025

Oman will launch ‘Golden Residency’ program to attract investors

Oman will launch ‘Golden Residency’ program to attract investors

JEDDAH: Oman will launch its “Golden Residency†program for investors on Aug. 31, in a move designed to attract foreign capital, boost economic growth, and position the country as a leading global business hub.

The Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Investment Promotion will unveil the residency program alongside the “Mujeedah Companies†initiative for high-performing firms and a new electronic service to transfer commercial registration ownership via the “Invest Oman†platform, according to the state news agency.

The announcement will be made at an event titled “Sustainable Business Environment,†hosted at the Sultan Qaboos Youth Complex for Culture and Recreation in Salalah under the patronage of Dhofar Gov. Sayyid Marwan bin Turki Al-Said.

Oman’s Golden Residency mirrors similar initiatives across the Gulf, including º£½ÇÖ±²¥â€™s Premium Residency Program and the UAE’s 10-year Golden Residency. 

The move aligns with Oman’s Vision 2040 strategy to diversify the economy beyond oil and foster a competitive, investment-friendly environment.

The residency program builds on reforms under Oman’s Foreign Capital Investment Law, which in recent years has allowed 100 percent foreign ownership in over 1,700 business activities, reduced registration fees, offered tax exemptions of up to 30 years, and streamlined more than 800 government services.

The Salalah event will also feature the signing of cooperation agreements with Sultan Qaboos University, the German University of Technology, the Oman Energy Association, and Binaa Professional Services to develop the construction sector, ONA reported.

Mubarak bin Mohammed Al-Douhani, director general of planning at MoCIIP, said these initiatives aim to provide investors with stable, long-term opportunities and position Oman as a global investment destination.

He added that the “Mujeedah Companies†program will help high-performing Omani firms expand locally and internationally through a package of incentives and support.

Al-Douhani, who also heads the ministry’s digital transformation team, highlighted the importance of digitalization in commercial transactions. The electronic authentication service for transferring commercial registration ownership is expected to cut time and costs for investors, while promoting transparency and efficiency.

The ministry is also focused on developing the construction sector to meet modern, sustainable standards and strengthening collaboration with academic institutions and the private sector to nurture talent and foster innovation.


ACWA Power finalizes $3.4bn financing for 2 gas-fired plants in º£½ÇÖ±²¥

ACWA Power finalizes $3.4bn financing for 2 gas-fired plants in º£½ÇÖ±²¥
Updated 24 August 2025

ACWA Power finalizes $3.4bn financing for 2 gas-fired plants in º£½ÇÖ±²¥

ACWA Power finalizes $3.4bn financing for 2 gas-fired plants in º£½ÇÖ±²¥
  • Plants to add combined 3.6 gigawatts to grid
  • ACWA Power will hold a 35% stake in both plants

RIYADH: Saudi utility firm ACWA Power has finalized SR12.8 billion ($3.4 billion) in non-recourse financing to build two large-scale gas-fired power plants, bolstering the Kingdom’s generation capacity as electricity demand rises. 

The facilities, which include Rumah-1 in the Riyadh region and Al-Nairiyah-1 in the Eastern Province, will each produce 1,800 megawatts, adding a combined 3.6 gigawatts to the grid. 

ACWA Power will hold a 35 percent stake in both plants, with Saudi Electricity Co. also holding 35 percent and Korea Electric Power Corp. owning the remaining 30 percent, according to a regulatory filing on Tadawul. 

The financial close, completed on Aug. 21 following an initial announcement in July, includes a 28-year debt package arranged by a consortium of lenders. 

“The lending group includes Export-Import Bank of Korea, Saudi National Bank, Saudi Investment Bank, Banque Saudi Fransi, Standard Chartered Bank, Bank of China, Agricultural Bank of China, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, and Arab Petroleum Investments Corporation,†the statement said. 

ACWA Power’s guarantees are limited to an equity bridge loan, early generation revenues, standby equity, and a reserve account, it added.

The company’s latest financing deal comes as it expands its portfolio across conventional and renewable energy to meet º£½ÇÖ±²¥â€™s Vision 2030 targets. 

Mandated by the Public Investment Fund to deliver around 70 percent of the Kingdom’s renewable capacity, ACWA Power is a central player in the National Renewable Energy Program, which aims to generate 58.7 GW from clean sources by the end of the decade. 

The company has recently brought nearly 2.8 GW of solar projects into operation across the Al-Kahfah, Al-Rass 2, and SAAD 2 plants, while also advancing the $8.4 billion green hydrogen project in Neom, set to produce 600 tonnes of hydrogen and 1.2 million tonnes of green ammonia annually. 

In July, ACWA Power signed $8.3 billion in agreements to develop seven solar and wind projects totaling 15 GW, part of the Kingdom’s plan to source 50 percent of its electricity from renewables by 2030. 

Globally, the company is pursuing expansion through acquisitions and partnerships. 

In February, it agreed to acquire French electric utility company Engie’s $693 million portfolio in Kuwait and Bahrain, while in July, it signed deals with European firms including TotalEnergies and Siemens Energy to support green energy exports to Europe. 

ACWA Power’s shares continued to rise on Tadawul, gaining 2.21 percent to reach SR 231.20 by 12:08 p.m. Saudi time on Sunday, reflecting investor confidence in the announcement’s strategic implications.