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Jamal Dajani

Jamal Dajani

Posted February 13, 2009 | 10:29 AM (EST)

The New Danger in the Middle East: Unemployment


This week, crude oil prices fell on the news of sinking petroleum consumption, with oil futures at the New York Mercantile Exchange down more than 5 percent to below $38 a barrel. While this news sounds like music to the average driver worldwide, it has been a nightmare for oil producing countries, especially those in the Middle East.

Just less than a year ago as oil prices soared, Arab Gulf countries were the envy of wealth-seekers across the globe. Once hailed as the economic superpower of the Middle East, Dubai in the United Arab Emirates is now looking like a ghost town.

Hundreds of billions of dollars worth of property projects have been scrapped or postponed in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and other Gulf countries causing major layoffs across most sectors. Foreigners, who make up 80-90 percent of the population in places like Dubai and Abu Dhabi, have been on the receiving end of the inevitable layoffs. Without jobs, these ex-workers lose their work visas and then must leave the country within a month.

According to local newspapers, thousands of cars sit abandoned in the parking lot at the Dubai Airport and others, left by fleeing, debt-ridden foreigners. Many of those foreigners are Arab nationals from countries such as Egypt, Syria and Lebanon.

The petro-bonanza has come to an end.

Unemployment is at its highest and most dangerous levels in the Middle East with some estimates putting it as high as 15 per cent. According to Amat Alsowa, the head of the UN Development Program's regional office, the average unemployment rate is 15 per cent in the Arab world, "but it reaches 40 per cent among people between the ages of 15 and 24, totaling 66 million out of the total Arab population of 317 million.

To travel through the Arab world right now is to experience a mood of disgruntlement and doubt, especially amongst those under 30. One of the countries hit the hardest is Egypt, where according to the World Bank, 20 percent of the population of 78 million lives under the poverty line of two dollars a day. Egypt's economic growth rate could fall by 50 percent in the current fiscal year, as the global financial meltdown pummels Suez Canal and tourism revenues -- two financial mainstays for the Arab world's most populous nation.

Last year, rising food and oil costs prompted a wave of discontent across Egypt. People have been killed in fights that broke out over bread shortages in bread queues. More than half a million Egyptians earning their living abroad are expected to return to Egypt by the end of 2009, adding more burden to the already faltering Egyptian economy.

Along with the several already troubled spots in the Arab world, such as Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine, and Algeria, it seems that this present dangerous level of unemployment will certainly engender political, social and economic disorder in many other Arab countries as well.

Jamal Dajani produces the Mosaic Intelligence Report on Link TV

 
 
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07:27 PM on 02/16/2009
For those who find stupid joy in this, know that the American market will be affected from this too.
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politicky
just follow the $$$
09:15 PM on 02/14/2009
I also saw this today, which looks like it might be a step in the right direction, eh?

"Saudi King Dismisses 2 Officials in a Shuffle
By ROBERT F. WORTH
Published: February 14, 2009
BEIRUT, Lebanon — The king of Saudi Arabia dismissed two powerful religious figures Saturday, as part of a government shuffle that appeared aimed at reforming the kingdom’s hard-line religious establishment.

King Abdullah removed the chief of the feared religious police and a conservative cleric who declared last fall that it was permissible to kill the owners of television stations that broadcast immoral content, the Saudi Press Agency reported. Also, for the first time in the kingdom, he appointed a woman to serve as a deputy cabinet minister, choosing a respected technocrat who will preside over girls’ education."

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/15/world/middleeast/15saudi.html?ref=world
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politicky
just follow the $$$
07:45 PM on 02/14/2009
I'm reading a book on Shia terrorism that was written in 1985 that reads "Of the 832 million Muslims in 70 nations--accounting for almost 1/5 of all mankind---roughly 10 % are Shia, and the violent extremists are but a tiny persentiage of that.*

*32 countries have Muslim majorities of 85% or higher.

Since the number of Muslims now is around 2 billion, either the author's numbers were off then, or the birthrate in the Middle East is way too high.
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leonardox1
01:46 PM on 02/13/2009
Don't forget that Gulf Arabs were also heavily invested in US markets, banking and real estate. Double whammy and poetic justice to those corrupt regimes. I feel sorry for the average citizen.
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newsjunkie5
02:15 PM on 02/13/2009
It's always the average citizen who suffers!
11:29 AM on 02/13/2009
We will have to see how long it takes the U.S. to reach 15% unemployment or higher.

Arab Gulf countries will have to figure out how to help themselves.
Perhaps these countries should in the future figure out how to use their money to create jobs in other industries other than oil.
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justice2008
12:15 PM on 02/13/2009
The problem with the Arab Sheikhdoms is that they put all their eggs in the oil basket investing very little in industries. Dubai and other UAE countries capitalized on real estate and banking and since both these sectors are hit, they have nothing to stand on. Gulf Arabs import everything including their headresses from China, Europe and the United States.
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newsjunkie5
12:32 PM on 02/13/2009
maybe they will finally learn

something has got to give

maybe this is the time
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cohen238765
04:36 PM on 02/14/2009
When they make peace with Israel, they'll import their stuff from there. These guys do not want to make anything but spend oil money.
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newsjunkie5
12:24 PM on 02/13/2009
This would be interesting to see materialize.

I wonder what other sectors the Arab countries could flourish in?
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justice2008
10:41 AM on 02/13/2009
Welcome to the club!

Maybe now some of the rich Arab fat cats might decide to downsize their sand palaces and share some of the wealth with their people.
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jad114
11:13 AM on 02/13/2009
How many Arab Madoffs are out there ? I read somewhere that many crooks made millions speculating on desert real estate and disappeared after ripping off their investors.
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cohen238765
12:24 PM on 02/13/2009
I guess Madoff in this case will be the King of Saudi Arabia, Hosni Mibarak of Egypt, The Emirs, the Sheikhs, and so on!
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newsjunkie5
12:24 PM on 02/13/2009
I think there is probably more than people realize or has been reported.