Will Gulf States Learn From Their Success in Handling the Pandemic?
by James M. Dorsey | May 27, 2020
This story was first published in Inside Arabia
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By
and large, Gulf states garnered public trust with degrees of transparency in
their handling of the pandemic and its associated economic crisis. Retaining
that trust going forward will depend on Gulf rulers’ willingness to embrace
transparency when it comes to policies designed to spark economic recovery and
govern structural reform.
The economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic for Gulf states has
done far more than play havoc with their revenue base and fiscal household. It
has propelled massive structural change to the top of their agenda in ways that
economic diversification plans had not accounted for.
Leave aside whether Gulf states can continue to
focus on high-profile, attention-grabbing projects like Neom, Saudi Arabia’s
$500 billion USD 21st century futuristic city
on the Red Sea.
Gulf rulers’ to do list, if they want to get things right, is long and
expensive without the burden of trophy projects. It involves economic as well
as social and ultimately political change.
Transparency and accurate and detailed public reporting go to the core
of these changes.
They also are key to decisions by investors, economists, and credit rating companies at
a time when Gulf states’ economic outlook is in question. Many complain that
delays in GDP reporting and lack of easy access to statistics complicates their
decision-making.
Nonetheless, if there is one thing autocratic Gulf
governments have going for themselves, beyond substantial financial reserves,
it is public confidence in the way they handled the pandemic, despite the fact that they failed to
initially recognize crowded living circumstances of migrant workers as a super
spreader.
Most governments acted early and decisively with lockdowns and curfews,
testing, border closures, repatriation of nationals abroad, and, in Saudi
Arabia, suspension of pilgrimages.
To be sure, Gulf countries, and particularly Saudi Arabia that receives
millions of Muslim pilgrims from across the globe each year, have a
long-standing history of dealing with epidemics. Like Singapore, South Korea,
and Taiwan, they were better prepared than Western nations.
History persuaded the kingdom to ban the umrah, the lesser Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca, in late
February, days before the first case of a Covid-19 infection emerged on Saudi
soil.
Beyond public health concerns, Saudi Arabia had an
additional reason to get the pandemic right. It offered the kingdom not only an
opportunity to globally polish its image, badly tarnished by human rights
abuses, power grabs, and the killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, but also to
retain religious influence despite the interruption in the flow of pilgrims to
the kingdom.
“Saudi Arabia is still a reference for many Muslim communities around
the world,” said Yasmine Farouk, a scholar of Saudi Arabia at the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace.
It also allowed Saudi Arabia to set the record straight following
criticism of its handling of the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) in
2012 when the kingdom became the epidemic’s epicenter and in 2009 when it was
hit by the H1N1 virus.
Saudi Arabia is also blamed for contributing to a public health
catastrophe in Yemen with its frequent indiscriminate bombings.
A country in ruins as a result of the military intervention, Yemen has
grappled for the past four years with a cholera epidemic on the kingdom’s
borders.
Trust in Gulf states’ handling of the current pandemic was bolstered by
degrees of transparency on the development of the disease in daily updates in
the number of casualties and fatalities.
It was further boosted by a speech by King Salman as
soon as the pandemic hit the kingdom in which he announced a raft of measures
to counter the disease and support the economy as well as assurances by agriculture minister Abdulrahman al-Fadli that the
crisis would not affect food supplies.
Ms. Farouk suggested that government instructions during the pandemic
were followed because of “trust in the government, the expertise and the
experience of the government [and] trust in the religious establishment, which
actually was following the technical decisions of the government.”
To be sure, Ms. Farouk acknowledged, the regime’s coercive nature gave
the public little choice.
The limits of government transparency were evident in the fact that
authorities were less forthcoming with details of public spending on the
pandemic and insight into available medical equipment like ventilators and
other supplies such as testing kits.
Some Gulf states have started publishing the daily and total number of
swabs but have yet to clarify whether these figures include multiple swabbings
of the same person.
“It is likely that publics in the Middle East will look back at who was
it that gave them reliable information, who was it who was there for them,”
said political scientist Nathan Brown.
The question is whether governments will conclude that transparency will
be needed to maintain public confidence as they are forced to rewrite social
contracts that were rooted in concepts of a cradle-to-grave welfare state but
will have to involve greater burden sharing.
Gulf governments have so far said little about burden sharing being
allocated equitably across social classes nor has there been transparency on
what drives investment decisions by sovereign wealth funds in a time of crisis
and changing economic outlook.
Speaking to the Financial
Times, a Gulf banker warned that the Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed
bin Salman “needs to be careful what he spends on . . . Joe Public will be
watching.”
Headed by Prince Mohammed, the kingdom’s sovereign
wealth fund has gone on a $7.7 billion USD shopping spree buying stakes in
major Western blue chips, including four oil majors: Boeing, Citigroup, Disney,
and Facebook. The Public Investment Fund is also funding a bid for English
soccer club Newcastle United.
The banker suggested that Saudi nationals would not appreciate
“millionaire footballer salaries being paid for by VAT (value added tax) on
groceries.” He was referring to this month’s hiking of sales taxes in the
kingdom from five to 15 percent.
The fragility and fickleness of public trust was on display for the
world to see in Britain’s uproar about Dominic Cummings, a close aide to Prime
Minister Boris Johnson, who violated lockdown instructions for personal
reasons. Mr. Johnson is struggling to fight off demands for Mr Cummings’
dismissal.
To be sure, senior government officials and business executives in the
Gulf have cautioned of hard times to come.
A recent Dubai Chamber of Commerce and Industry survey of
CEOs predicted that 70 percent of the United Arab Emirates’ companies would go
out of business in the next six months, including half of its restaurants and
hotels and three-quarters of its travel and tourism companies.
Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan warned
earlier this month that the kingdom would need to take “painful” measures and
look for deep spending cuts as a result of the collapse of oil prices and
significantly reduced demand for oil.
Aware of sensitivities, Mr. Al-Jadaan stressed that “as long as we do
not touch the basic needs of the people, all options are open.”
There was little transparency in Mr. Al-Jadaan’s statements on what the
impact would be on employment-seeking Saudi nationals in a labor market where
fewer migrant workers would be available for jobs that Saudis have long been
unwilling to accept.
It was a missed opportunity considering the 286
percent increase in the number of Saudis flocking to work for
delivery services.
The increase was fueled by an offer by Hadaf, the Saudi Human Resources
Development Fund, to pay drivers $800 USD a month, as well as a newly-found
embrace of volunteerism across the Gulf.
The surge offered authorities building blocks to
frame expectations at a time when the kingdom’s official unemployment rate of 12 percent is likely to rise.
It suggested a public acknowledgement of the fact that well-paying,
cushy government positions may no longer be as available as they were in the
past as well as the fact that lesser jobs are no less honorable forms of
employment.
That may be the silver lining as
Gulf states feel the pressure to reinvent themselves in a world emerging from a
pandemic that potentially will redraw social, economic, and political maps.
Dr. James
M. Dorsey is an award-winning journalist and a senior fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in
Singapore. He is also an adjunct senior research fellow at the National
University of Singapore’s Middle East Institute and co-director of the
University of Wuerzburg’s Institute of Fan Culture in Germany
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