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GCC countries have recorded strong digital sector growth over the last decade. They now have the opportunity to move from being mostly adopters of digital technologies to becoming disruptors hosting powerful local companies, institutions, and talent. If GCC countries went from being digital adopters to being digital disruptors, they could add US$138 billion to regional GDP.
We recently measured where the GCC countries stand using the Digital Economy Index (DEI), a comprehensive measure of the digital maturity of 109 countries between 2010 and 2020. The DEI has five pillars: foundations, talent, innovation, adoption, and local production.
The GCC region’s DEI score grew the fastest of any part of the world, at twice the speed of the OECD countries over the last decade. GCC countries have invested in digital infrastructure, adopted e-government platforms, and launched technology parks and business incubators.
Yet in overall terms, GCC countries still have a significant opportunity to capture the economic potential from digital. Ranked by DEI performance, countries can be grouped into three categories:
Our analysis of the 109 countries confirms a strong positive correlation between a country’s DEI score and national economic development and performance. Specifically, our analysis demonstrates that a 10 percentage point increase in any country’s DEI score would lead to a 2.6 percent increase in GDP per capita growth and 1.1 percent growth in employment.
If GCC countries were to move from being adopters to being disruptors, the contribution of the digital economy to the overall economy would grow from 12.2 percent to 13.4 percent. For example, if Saudi Arabia were to increase its DEI from 44.47 to 54.72 (Germany’s level), its GDP per capita would increase from $19,587 to $20,779, and it would provide a net gain of around 340,000 jobs.
Capturing this opportunity requires that governments take vigorous action to implement the correct policies. Our DEI analysis shows that GCC countries need more digital talent, innovation, and domestically produced digital products and services if they are to play a role in global digital markets over the medium term. Similarly, the region needs more digital activity in terms of patents, disruptive business models, and venture capital availability to keep up with the activity of advanced economies.
To leap the digital gap and keep pace with advanced economies, GCC countries need to focus their efforts in three main areas:
First, they should reform the regulatory frameworks to adapt to the new market realities of the digital era. Regulations need to be adaptive and anticipatory to keep pace with technological and business model changes. Governments also need to build their economic and technical capacity in a way that will allow them to assess continually the impact of specific policies, and correct any implementation shortfalls. In particular, careful regulations of financial services, data protection, digital economy policies (e.g., taxation), cybersecurity, and e-commerce transactions can increase the efficiency of financial flows in the region.
Second, GCC countries should deepen the talent pool. Countries in the region need more digital talent, a key enabler to build sustainable, thriving digital economies. Digital talent is a combination of the capacity of the education system to produce the knowledgeable graduates required by the economy, upgrade the basic and advanced skills of current workers to operate and innovate digital technology, and increase the current share of the labor force employed in digital occupations.
Third, policymakers need to strengthen innovation and localization. Local production and digital innovation are vital because they contribute significantly to the growth of national GDP and jobs, either directly through revenues and direct employment, or indirectly by nurturing an ecosystem of innovative startups and SMEs.
Growing the digital economy is no longer a choice for Gulf countries. It is an imperative for their economic future, ensuring economic growth, creating jobs, and building economic resilience and sovereignty.
This article originally appeared in Arab News, November 2021.
Bahjat El-Darwiche and Tarek El Zein are partners at Strategy& Middle East, part of the PwC network, Dima Sayess is a partner and the director of the Ideation Center, the leading think tank for Strategy& in the Middle East, and Melissa Rizk is a senior fellow at the Ideation Center.
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