Global Policy

The Arab Spring Can Bring a Demographic Dividend: That is Good for Business and Investors

What does this Arab Spring’s economic determinants say to foreign investors who want to invest in the Arab world? Undoubtedly, the non-oil producing Arab world needs foreign investment to provide technological know-how and innovation in short-supply throughout the region’s production value-chains and energy facilities. Doing so would create labour-intensive jobs, augment the technical and post-secondary education sector, and lead to investment in infrastructural development projects needed in meeting urbanization challenges such as transportation, housing, food security, and sewage systems. There is simply not enough domestic capital and know-how to generate the kinds of employment and productive capacity needed to meet the needs of many Arab people that live in non-oil producing countries. Foreign investment is needed to the produce the kinds of economic growth sought by many job-seeking Arabs, but not all foreign investment is created equal. The lesson for businesses who have a longstanding presence in the Arab world is to invest in increasing the productive capacity of the Arab world. There is immense opportunity with an educated and eager workforce ready to become a powerful force of consumers and producers in the global economy. 

The causes and determinants of the political revolutions sweeping the Arab world are still too complex and nascent to explain with the definitiveness of an academic analysis. Yet there is an overwhelming belief that economic factors are a key part of the larger puzzle of the events of the Arab Spring. In many transition countries, the Arab Spring was not instigated by the poor underclass of the Arab world; instead, it was the educated, unemployed, disenfranchised, and likely lower middle class youth of the region that took to the internet and the streets to protest. The Arab Spring started in countries that had economic growth and were leading economic reformers: Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, and even Syria were ‘successfully liberalizing’ their economies, according to the World Bank, the IMF, and rating agencies. But the revolutions hit these same countries where the elite did not distribute the economic growth to the masses at a pace that met the rising expectations of the educated youth. Undoubtedly, other factors have included autocratic governments and abuses by policy and security forces. Nevertheless, a key factor to understanding the revolutions is to understand the underlying economic factors of the Arab Spring. 

While the region is in a period of difficult transition, there is reason to be hopeful and optimistic that the Arab Spring will lead to progress. The Arab Middle East is soon going to experience a demographic dividend: economic growth due to its educated, youthful population, coupled with declining fertility rates. The challenge for policymakers will be to ensure that this is productive economic growth and to not repeat errors of past mal-investments into non-productive sectors.

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