February 18th, 2011
05:53 PM GMT

Middle East: Change is never easy
30x30.john.defterios
Posted by:
CNN business anchor, John Defterios

As an active observer and a consistent visitor of the Middle East, one asks a 
simple question: Why does it have to be this way?

I am not talking about Shiite/Sunni divides, the Palestinian/Israeli conflict 
or Iran's growing influence in the region, but persistent and unacceptable 
levels of poverty in a region blessed with nearly half of the world's oil and 
gas reserves.

First it was Tunisia, then Egypt, Yemen, Algeria, Libya and stretching into the 
Gulf with Bahrain.

There are major historical and cultural differences, of course, and even vast 
differences in per-capita income – Bahrain for example is high at $38,400, 
Yemen low at $2,500. But a few common threads can be found: the region's youth 
lack opportunities, power is concentrated at the top and the inner circle 
around them, and most waited too long to embrace the winds of change brought on 
by globalization.

A small but influential group of business people from the region formed the 
Arab Business Council (ABC) within the World Economic Forum in June 2003. I 
attended one of its first major meetings, ironically, in Manama, Bahrain, in 
2005, where the co-founders and architects of the initiative rang alarm bells 
about rapid birth rates and the need to create 100 million jobs by 2020. That 
number was not to lower unemployment but to only tread water in terms of 
double-digit jobless rates amongst the region's youth.

During a series of panels and interviews and in our coverage on Marketplace 
Middle East, we consistently asked how it would be possible to create that many 
jobs in such a short span of time. In sum, the symptom was easy to identify, 
the remedy much more complex. The ABC talked of PPPs, public-private 
partnerships, accelerating reforms and opening up governments - especially the 
monarchies in the Gulf States – to a wider swath of the population.

In fairness, economic reforms have taken place. In Egypt, nearly $50 billion 
dollars flowed in as a result of lower taxes, labor reforms and the setting up 
of industrial zones and improved infrastructure.

A visit to Bahrain would clearly lead one to believe it earned a reputation as 
the "Switzerland of the Middle East." Tax rates are fair, the labor force 
educated and meetings start on time. No wonder both of these economies grew 
during the global downturn, whether it was Egypt with 80 million people or tiny 
Bahrain with about 800,000 nationals.

But it would also be fair to say that reforms were started too late and have 
certainly not benefited everyone equally. While Emirates, Qatar Airways and now 
Etihad have set up large fleets, fly into first class airport hubs for 
travellers between Europe and Asia and connect the Middle East to the world, 
the region until very recently was bypassed by foreign investors. China and 
India were beckoning, as well as an ASEAN market of 600 million consumers in 
Southeast Asia.

To be frank, a potential market of 350 million consumers in the Middle East has 
not come together fast enough. Old rivalries amongst the region's royals still 
persist and until this social media revolution kicked off the power brokers of 
North Africa have been (and some still are) unwilling to open up their 
economies and their societies to change.

During a wide-ranging interview with the Crown Prince of Bahrain two years ago, 
Sheikh Salman bin Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa 
noted that change has to be managed.

In his words: "Change is never easy but I think it must be tackled with the 
right ambition, must be tackled with the right energy as well to achieve 
success."

His answer pertained to a question on why some senior Sunni legislators were 
resisting efforts by the ruling Khalifa family to open up parliament to more of 
their Shiite counterparts.

The government - unusually for the region – has made efforts to put forth 
economic and political reforms, but in this new environment, with populations 
viewing their neighbors' actions online and on their TV set top boxes, the pace 
of the change in the recent past is proving too slow for a younger, educated 
generation which is not asking, but demanding more.




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