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Kenneth Pollack -- Brookings
Institute
July 13, 2008
You might think that $140 per barrel
oil would be good for at least one part of the world, the Middle East. Its
too soon to tell for certain, but the region may well turn out to be the
part of the world that suffers the most.
As painful as the current (or coming)
oil-driven recession will be for Americans, it does seem to be convincing
us to make the sacrifices necessary to diminish our reliance on oil. Over
the long term, that could prove a huge boon for our economy, our environment
and our national security.
In the Middle East, the situation
may be reversed. Right now, the region is experiencing an economic boom,
creating the opportunity to address the deep-seated political, economic and
social problems that have spawned terrorist groups like Al Qaeda. Thats
certainly what the people of the region hope.
The danger is that the way that the
rising revenues are being spent will more likely worsen the regions
instability over time.
And thats a problem, because
problems in the Middle East have a bad habit of becoming big problems for
the rest of the world. The Middle East isnt Las Vegas: what happens
there doesnt stay there.
In the 1970s and 80s, during
the first great oil boom, the Middle Eastern producers largely squandered
their wealth. Some did set up vast social-welfare networks that improved
health care (an important reason for the explosive population growth of the
past 30 years). But by and large they sent the money overseas, putting it
in foreign real estate and Swiss bank accounts. This did nothing to develop
(let alone diversify) their economies, and so when the boom turned to bust
in the 1990s, economic problems mushroomed. With them came political discontent,
terrorism and rebellion.
This time around, some Middle Eastern
oil producers are trying to be smarter. They are investing billions of dollars
at home, building industries, repairing roads and factories, and expanding
social services. This has led regional elites and many in the international
financial community to proclaim a new era in the Middle East one in
which the new oil revenues will diversify the regions economies, create
jobs for everyone, and make the Arab states the worlds economic
superpower.
If this sounds unlikely, its
because it almost certainly is. More oil money is being re-invested in the
region, but it is not being spent where it is most needed. As a result, it
is having little impact on what really matters, and is even creating problems.
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The macroeconomics often do look great: gross domestic product, trade and
foreign direct investment are all rising substantially. But unemployment
and underemployment have declined very little and inflation is rising quickly.
At a microeconomic level, critical problems belie the rosy picture painted
by the superficial macro indicators.
In addition, much of the money is
being re-invested in projects intended to produce quick profits for investors
rather than long-term political and economic gains. A great deal of it is
going into non-productive sectors like real estate and oil refining. Many
of the factories being built with the new oil revenues will be heavily automated
plants that will employ few people.
The industries that create lots of
new jobs, like tourism, agriculture and construction, import workers from
southern and southeastern Asia rather than hire locals. Similarly, the oil
revenues are being used to expand educational systems but, with a few exceptions,
not to reform them. Consequently, more students are being educated
and their expectations of a better life whetted only to find out that
they lack the skills to get the jobs they believe their schooling entitles
them to. Across the region, youth unemployment averages at least 25 percent,
close to double the global average.
Both the rise in energy prices and the flood of oil revenues
have stoked inflation. Qatars current rate is 14 percent, up from 2.6
percent in the 2002-2004 period. As always, inflation hits the middle and
lower classes hardest, and in many Arab states it is destroying the middle
class, driving its members to the levels of the poor. That is pushing many
into the arms of Islamist extremists seeking to overthrow the regimes.
The rise in global food prices has
also hit the Middle East hard. Bread riots have convulsed Egypt and Yemen
(not major oil producers, but two of the Arab worlds most populous
states and cogs in the regional economy). In Saudi Arabia, fear of riots
led the government to threaten to detain or confiscate the businesses of
bakers and store owners who sell flour above the government-set subsidized
price.
To combat the effects of inflation,
Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman and the United Arab Emirates have raised government
salaries by 15 percent to 70 percent. In the short run this could help civil
servants, but it also further increases inflation and does nothing to deal
with the structural economic problems.
The foreign workers whom Arab states
increasingly rely on because they tend to be cheaper and more productive
than their own citizens are also beginning to show signs of unhappiness with
their shoddy treatment. Foreign workers, who make up 80 percent to 95 percent
of the private sector work forces in the small Persian Gulf states, have
gone on strike in recent months in Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates to
protest inflation, which is eroding their earnings. With foreigners making
up roughly 40 percent of the population of the Arabian Peninsula, such labor
unrest is ominous.
Meanwhile, the regions rich
have grown obscenely more wealthy through their ability to tap into the windfall
oil profits, both legally and illegally. The wealthiest measure their wealth
in the billions, while the poorest are so poor that growing numbers cannot
even afford to marry.
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Money pouring in but not trickling down tends to create a dangerous social
imbalance. People hope their countrys oil windfall will alleviate their
own economic problems only to find that vast sums are being siphoned off
into graft; redirected out of the country to private accounts; spent on luxury
items, military hardware or white elephant projects; or simply
wasted.
It is worth keeping in mind the worst
case from the history of the first Middle Eastern oil boom. Under Shah Mohammed
Reza Pahlavi, Iran tried to use the influx of oil revenues after the 1973
oil-price increases to build new industries, eradicate unemployment, transform
the economy and modernize society. On paper, the shahs efforts seemed
superbly enlightened. As in the Arab states today, the macro indicators of
Iranian progress per capita gross domestic product, education expansion,
foreign investment seemed phenomenal. But the projects were mismanaged
and riddled with graft. The royal cronies became fabulously wealthy while
the plight of the average Iranian worsened because of protracted unemployment
coupled with soaring inflation. Rather than solving Irans problems,
the oil boom sparked the Iranian revolution.
A few in the region seem to be heeding
that lesson. King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia continues to demonstrate a keen
grasp of what is in his countrys best long-term interests. He has poured
money into economic cities that serve as centers of excellence
to attract the kind of meaningful investment that, over time, could lift
the Saudi labor force out of its dangerous doldrums. He is establishing the
King Abdullah University, bringing in professors from all over the world
to develop a curriculum emphasizing science, technology and innovation. But
even here there is a dark lining: Abdullah is 83, and it is doubtful that
his successors would continue such projects with the same progressive
determination.
How can the region turn things around?
For starters, those charged with managing its sovereign wealth funds and
private investments need to shift from bankrolling capital-intensive industries
that guarantee a high return for the investor to financing labor-intensive
industries that could increase employment and develop a more capable work
force.
At some level, this means thinking
of regional investment as a form of deliberate wealth redistribution, social
engineering and charity. It will certainly cut into the bottom lines during
the short term, but if those who hold the purse strings are wise enough to
do it, it should yield priceless political rewards in the years ahead
political rewards that are probably going to be necessary if they are to
avoid being swept out of power by angry mobs.
Avoiding those kind of internal upheavals
and eliminating much of the anger and despair upon which the terrorists and
extremists prey would be a major boon to a world that is likely to remain
addicted to Middle Eastern oil, and therefore vulnerable to its vicissitudes,
for decades to come.
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