On
February 24, 2003, in the Islamic Financial Forum in Dubai, Brad
Bourland, chief economist for the Saudi American Bank (SAMBA),
breached the embarrassed silence that invariably enshrouds speakers
in Middle Eastern get-togethers. He reminded the assembled that
despite the decades-long fortuity of opulent oil revenues, the
nations of the region - excluding Turkey and Israel - failed to
reform their economies, let alone prosper.
Structural weaknesses, imperceptible growth, crippling unemployment
and deteriorating government financing confined Arab states to
the role of oil-addicted minions. At $540 billion, said Bourland,
quoted by Middle East Online, the combined gross domestic product
of all the Arab countries is smaller than Mexico's (or Spain's,
adds The Economist).
According to the Arab League, the gross national product of all
its members amounted to $712 billion or 2 percent of the world's
GNP in 2001 - merely double sub-Saharan Africa's.
Even the recent tripling of the price of oil - their main export
commodity - did not generate sustained growth equal to the burgeoning
population and labor force. Algeria's official unemployment rate
is 26.4 percent, Oman's 17.2 percent, Tunisia's 15.6 percent,
Jordan's 14.4 percent, Saudi Arabia's 13 percent and Kuwait sports
an unhealthy 7.1 percent. Even with 8 percent out of work, Egypt
needs to grow by 6 percent annually just to stay put, estimates
the World Bank.
But the real figures are way higher. At least one fifth of the
Saudi and Egyptian labor forces go unemployed. Only one tenth
of Saudi women have ever worked. The region's population has almost
doubled in the last quarter century, to 300 million people. Close
to two fifths of the denizens of the Arab world are minors.
According to the Iranian news agency, IRNA, the European Commission
on the Mediterranean Region estimates that the purchasing power
parity income per head in the area is a mere 39 percent of the
EU's 2001 average, comparable to many post-communist countries
in transition. In nominal terms the figure is 28 percent. These
statistics include Israel whose income per capita equals 84 percent
of the EU's and the Palestinian Authority where GDP fell by 10
percent in 2000 and by another 15 percent the year after.
Faced with ominously surging social unrest, the Arab regimes
- all of them lacking in democratic legitimacy - resort to ever
more desperate measures. "Saudisation", for instance,
amounts to the expulsion of 3 million foreign laborers to make
room for indigenous idlers reluctant to take on these vacated
- mostly menial - jobs. About one million, typically Western,
expat experts remain untouched.
The national accounts of Arab polities are in tatters. Until
the recent surge in oil prices, Saudi Arabia managed to produce
a budget surplus only once since 1982. Per capita income in the
kingdom plunged from $26,000 in 1981 to $7000 in 2003. Higher
oil prices may well continue throughout 2006, further masking
the calamitous state of the region's economies. But this would
amount to merely postponing the inevitable.
Arab countries are not integrated into the world economy. It
is possibly the only part of the globe, bar Africa, to have entirely
missed the trains of globalization and technological progress.
Charlene Barshefsky was United States Trade Representative from
1997 to 2001. In February 2003, in a column published by the New
York Times, she noted that:
"Muslim countries in the region trade less with one another
than do African countries, and much less than do Asian, Latin
American or European countries. This reflects both high trade
barriers ... and the deep isolation Iran, Iraq and Libya have
brought on themselves through violence and support for terrorist
groups ... The Middle East still depends on oil. Today, the United
States imports slightly more than $5 billion worth of manufactured
goods and farm products from the 22 members of the Arab League,
Afghanistan and Iran combined - or about half our value-added
imports from Hong Kong alone."
Indeed, Jewish Israel and secular Turkey aside, 8 of the 11 largest
economies of the Middle East have yet to join the World Trade
Organization. Only two decades ago, one of every seven dollars
in global export revenues and one twentieth of the world's foreign
direct investment flowed to Arab pockets.
Today, the Middle East's share of international trade and FDI
is less than 1.5 percent - half of it with the European Union.
Medium size economies such as Sweden's attract more capital than
the entire Middle Eastern Moslem world put together.
Some Arab countries periodically go through spastic reforms only
to submerge once more in backwardness and venality. Oil-producers
attempted some structural economic adjustments in the 1990s. Jordan
and Syria privatized a few marginal state-owned enterprises. Iran
and Iraq cut subsidies. Almost everyone - especially Lebanon,
Egypt, Iran and Jordan - increased their unhealthy reliance on
multilateral loans and foreign aid.
Young King Abdullah II of Jordan, for instance, dabbles in deregulation,
liberalization, tax reform, cutting red tape and tariff reductions.
Aided by a free trade agreement with America passed by Congress
in 2001, Jordan's exports to the United States last year soared
from $16 million in 1998 to $400 million in 2002.
A similar nostrum is being administered to Morocco, partly to
spite the European Union and its glacial "Barcelona Process"
Euro- Mediterranean Partnership. But, as everyone realizes, the
region's problems run deeper than any tweaking of the customs
code.
The "Arab Human Development Report 2002", published
in June 2002 by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP),
was composed entirely by Arab scholars. It charts the predictably
dismal landscape: one in five inhabitants survives on less than
$2 a day; annual growth in income per capita over the last 20
years, at 0.5 percent, exceeded only sub-Saharan Africa's; one
in six is unemployed.
The region's three "deficits", laments the report,
are freedom, knowledge and manpower. Arab polities and societies
are autocratic and intolerant. Illiteracy is still rampant and
education poor. Women - half the workforce - are ill-treated and
excluded. Pervasive Islamization replaced earlier militant ideologies
in stifling creativity and growth.
In an article titled "Middle East Economies: A Survey of
Current Problems and Issues", published in the September
1999 issue of the Middle East Review of International Affairs,
Ali Abootalebi, assistant professor of political science at the
University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire, concluded:
"The Middle East is second only to Africa as the least developed
region in the world. It has already lost much of its strategic
importance since the Soviet Union's demise ... Most Middle Eastern
states ... probably do, possess the necessary technocratic and
professional personnel to run state affairs in an efficient and
modern manner .... (but not) the willingness or ability of the
elites in charge to disengage the old coalitional interests that
dominate governments in these countries."
The war with Iraq changed all that. This was the fervent hope
of intellectuals throughout the region, even those viscerally
opposed to America's high-handed hegemony. But this may well be
only another false dawn in many. The inevitable massive postwar
damage to the area's fragile economies will spawn added oppression
rather than enhance democracy.
According to The Economist, the military buildup has already
injected $2 billion into Kuwait's economy, equal to 6 percent
of its GDP. Prices of everything - from real estate to cars -
are rising fast. The stock exchange index has soared by one third.
American largesse extends to Turkey - the recipient of $5 billion
in grants, $1 billion in oil and $10 billion in loan guarantees.
Egypt and Jordan will reap $1 billion apiece and, possibly, subsidized
Saudi oil as well. Israel will abscond with $8 billion in collateral
and billions in cash.
But the party may be short-lived, especially since the war did
not prove to be as decisive and nippy as the Americans foresaw.
Stratfor, the strategic forecasting consultancy, correctly observes
that the United States is likely to encourage American oil companies
to boost Iraq's postbellum production. With Venezuela back on
line and global tensions eased, deteriorating crude prices may
adversely affect oil-dependent countries from Iran to Algeria.
The resulting social and political unrest - coupled with violent,
though typically impotent, protests against the war, America and
the political leadership - is unlikely to convince panicky tottering
regimes to offer greater political openness and participatory
democracy. The mock presidential elections in Egypt in 2005 are
a case in point.
War also traumatized tourism, another major regional foreign
exchange earner. Egypt alone collects $4 billion a year from eager
pyramid-gazers - about one ninth of its GDP. Add to that the effects
of armed conflict on traffic in the Suez Canal, on investments
and on expat remittances - and the country could well become the
war's greatest victim.
In a recent economic conference of the Arab League, then Egyptian
Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Faiza Abu el-Naga, pegged
the immediate losses to her country at $6-8 billion. More than
200,000 jobs were lost in tourism alone. Egypt's Information and
Decision Support Centre (IDSC) distributed a study predicting
$900 million in damages to the Jordanian economy and billions
more to be incurred by oil-rich Saudi Arabia.
The Arab Bank Federation foresees banking losses of up to $60
billion due to contraction in economic activity both during the
war and in its aftermath. This may be too pessimistic. But even
the optimists talk about $30 billion in foregone revenues. The
reconstruction of Iraq could revitalize the sector - but American
and European banks will probably monopolize the lucrative opportunity.
The war, and more so its protracted aftermath, are likely to
have a stultifying effect on the investment climate.
Saudi Arabia and Egypt each attract around $1 billion a year
in foreign direct investment - double Iran's rising rate. But
global FDI was halved between 2000-2002. In 2003, flows reverted
merely to 1998 levels. This implosion is likely to affect even
increasingly attractive or resurgent destinations such as Israel,
Turkey, Iraq and Iran.
Foreign investors will be deterred not only by the fighting but
also by a mounting wave of virulent - and increasingly violent
- xenophobia. Consumer boycotts are a traditional weapon in the
Arab political arsenal. Coca-Cola's sales in these parched lands
have plummeted by 10 percent in 2002 alone. Pepsi's overseas sales
flattened due to Arabs shunning its elixirs. American-franchised
fast food outlets saw their business halved. McDonald's had to
close some of its restaurants in Jordan.
Foreign business premises have been vandalized even in the Gulf
countries. According to The Economist "in the past year (2002)
overall business at western fast-food and drinks firms has dropped
by 40% in Arab countries. Trade in American branded goods has
shrunk by a quarter."
These are bad news. Multinationals are sizable employers. Coca-Cola
alone is responsible for 220,000 jobs in the Middle East. Procter
& Gamble invested $100 million in Egypt. Foreign enterprises
pay well and transfer technology and management skills to their
local joint venture partners.
Nor is foreign involvement confined to retail. The $35 billion
Middle Eastern petrochemicals sector is reliant on the kindness
of strangers: Indian, Canadian, South Korean and, lately, Chinese.
Singapore and Malaysia are eyeing the tourism industry, especially
in the Gulf. Their withdrawal from the indigenous economies might
prove disastrous.
Nor will these battered nations be saved by geopolitical benefactors.
The economies of the Middle East are off the radar screen of
the Bush administration, accuses Edward Gresser of the Progressive
Policy Institute in a recently published report titled "Blank
Spot on the Map: How Trade Policy is Working Against the War on
Terror".
Egypt and most other Moslem countries are heavily dependent on
their textile and agricultural exports to the West. But, by 2015,
they will face tough competition from nations with contractual
trade advantages granted them by the United States, goes the author.
Still, the fault is shared by entrenched economic interest groups
in the Middle East . Petrified by the daunting prospect of reforms
and the ensuing competitive environment, they block free trade,
liberalization and deregulation.
Consider the Persian Gulf, a corner of the world which subsists
on trading with partners overseas.
Not surprisingly, most of the members of the Arab Gulf Cooperation
Council have joined the World Trade Organization a while back.
But their citizens are unlikely to enjoy the benefits at least
until 2010 due to obstruction by the club's all-powerful and tentacular
business families, international bankers and economists told the
Times of Oman.
The rigidity and malignant self-centeredness of the political
and economic elite and the confluence of oppression and profiteering
are the crux of the region's problems. No external shock - not
even war in Iraq - comes close to having the same pernicious and
prolonged effects.
Sam Vaknin ( http://samvak.tripod.com
) is the author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and
After the Rain - How the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist
for Global Politician, Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline,
and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business
Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central East
Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at http://samvak.tripod.com