Home Industry Economy Expat population in some GCC states may drop by up to 10% – report Employment across the GCC could fall by around 13 per cent due to the impact of the coronavirus by Bloomberg May 24, 2020 Population in some of the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council countries may drop as much as 10 per cent as the impact of the coronavirus forces their largely foreign workers to leave the nations, according to Oxford Economics. “The dependence of the GCC on expat workers and large swathes of job losses as the lockdowns bite in key sectors may result in significant falls in population, which could have longer-lasting implications,” Scott Livermore, chief economist at Oxford Economics Middle East, wrote in a report. The report also said: – “The GCC is in recession as lockdowns to mitigate the spread of Covid-19 and the ramifications of low oil prices hit the non-oil economies. As a result, employment across the GCC could fall by around 13 per cent, with peak-to-trough job losses of some 900,000 in the UAE and 1.7 million in Saudi Arabia.” – “Dependence on expat workers in vulnerable sectors means the burden of job losses will fall on the expat population. Combined with visas depending on employment and lack of a social safety net, an expat exodus is likely as travel restrictions are eased.” – “While an expat exodus may mean that the GCC ‘exports’ some of the impact of recession, it will also have some adverse consequences on key sectors, such as possible labour shortages as the hospitality sector recovers, an additional drag on property markets and potential price pressures in certain quarters.” Tags Covid-19 Economy Expat GCC job losses oil prices population Saudi Arabia UAE 0 Comments You might also like How UK firms can revolutionise the GCC’s construction and sustainable infrastructure sector Most GCC central banks follow Fed lead, lower key interest rates UAE launches basic health insurance for private sector workers, domestic staff Arab Health to mark 50th anniversary with landmark edition in Jan