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When some 850 political, business, religious and cultural leaders from around
the world met on the banks of the Dead Sea in Jordan this past May at a World
Economic Forum (WEF) regional conference called Facing the Real Challenges:
Partnering for Change, Peace and Development, I addressed the group as one of
three cochairmen. I told the audience, which included Secretary of State Colin
Powell and United Arab Emirates Crown Prince Sheikh Mohamed Bin Rashid Al
Maktoum, that the major obstacles to economic reform and investment in the
Middle East were corruption, bureaucracy and political instability. | | (Illustration by Matt Mahurin.) | The participants who live in the region were in full agreement. In fact, over
the past year a group of Middle Eastern business leaders, now numbering 77, has
been working to create its own development initiatives through a WEF-sponsored
committee called the Arab Business Council. This organization of private-sector
business owners and executives represents a variety of industries that function
outside of the government-owned conglomerates that dominate the oil industry.
The council’s work is aimed at improving the economic competitiveness in the
Arab world, as part of a wider push for economic, social and, eventually,
political reform. They have set up a national council on competitiveness in
Egypt, and have plans for similar councils in Morocco and Jordan.The council members have been adamant that theirs be a movement focused on
working from within the Arab world, without external pressures. They clearly do
not welcome the involvement of Westerners, except as consultants. | They very clearly do not welcome the involvement of Westerners, except as consultants. | I have found business leaders from the Middle East to be well aware that there
is an urgent need to foster growth, prosperity and stability in the region. In
the Arab world, half of all women are illiterate, 10 million children do not
attend school and per capita income shows the slowest growth rate in the world
after sub-Saharan Africa. But to improve these conditions requires addressing a
complex range of interrelated issues. Middle Eastern executives find it
troubling that all of the Arab states combined receive less than 2 percent of
the world’s foreign direct investment. Arab leaders seem to have recognized the
insidious problem of corruption. Global organizations ranging from the
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development to Transparency
International have created a framework for setting up checks and balances
against corruption, but there has not been a credible effort from inside the
region to apply those standards.Seeds of Change To enact positive change, the Arab world must see active cooperation between the
region’s governments and leading organizations to move toward liberal,
market-oriented economic policies. This will require a significant improvement
in educational and vocational training systems to create a work force fit for
the global economy. Arab leaders must also make certain that the processes of
governance are strengthened with more accountability and efficiency to reduce
transaction costs, while providing more incentives for foreign or inter-Arab
investments. According to a World Bank report published in 2004, protectionism is more of a
deterrent to economic growth in the Middle East than violence. The World Bank
estimates that if only half of the region’s trade and private investment
potential were to be realized over the next decade, per capita GDP growth would
rise from the current 1 percent to about 4 percent per year. The members of the Arab Business Council recognize that the most overwhelming
challenge the region will face in the next 10 years is the lack of opportunities
for a predominantly young and growing population. The Middle Eastern economy
will have to create 80 million new jobs between now and 2017 simply to maintain
unemployment at its already high levels. If the business and government sectors
do not create an environment that is more competitive and more favorable to
direct investment, the bleak prospects for young adults trying to enter the work
force will continue to feed a channel of negative energy. That presents an
alarming scenario for the entire world. Those of us who have interests in the Middle East find the council a positive
step. It offers the real prospect of responding to the aspirations of Arab
people by delivering a coherent and structured reform package conceived from
within Arab society.  |
Alan Boeckmann is chairman and chief executive officer of Fluor
Corporation. |
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