Kuwait's Prime Minister has said the country's expatriate population should be more than halved to 30% of the total, as the coronavirus pandemic and a slump in oil prices send shudders through Gulf economies. (Bloomberg reports / NDTV)
Foreigners account for nearly 3.4 million of Kuwait's 4.8 million people, and "we have a future challenge to redress this imbalance," Sheikh Sabah Al-Khalid Al-Sabah told the top editors of local newspapers on Wednesday, according to an official statement carried by state-run KUNA.
The comments are a rare public acknowledgement by the executive of one of Kuwait's most contentious issues, and follow a renewed push by lawmakers to reduce the number of overseas workers, particularly unskilled labour, with the economy under intense strain. MPs are proposing a quota system as well as replacing all expatriate government employees, estimated at 100,000, with Kuwaitis.
Critics of the approach point out that small pools of citizens will make replacing many foreign workers difficult, especially in occupations Kuwaitis are reluctant to take up, and will lower overall consumption. On Twitter, some reacted with scorn.
"The percentage of domestic helpers alone is more than 50% of Kuwaitis, let alone the other residents," said Sajed Al-Abdaly, a prominent political columnist. "Some statements are impossible from the moment they're made. Your Excellency, talk to our minds so that you can help us to believe in the seriousness of your proposition."
Gulf economies leveraged their oil wealth to expand their populations with foreign workers and build vibrant consumer societies.
Saudi Arabia, alongside Germany, is the world's second-biggest destination for migrants, while the United Arab Emirates last year hosted more migrants than France or Canada, according to United Nations estimates.
In Kuwait, at least 650,000 expatriates, mostly from the Philippines, India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, are employed as domestic workers alone.
Expats get to earn better incomes in a low-tax environment -- part of which is repatriated home -- but are vulnerable with few safety nets in their host nation or routes to citizenship.
As countries in the Gulf rolled out tens of billions of dollars worth of stimulus measures geared toward helping companies and banks survive the slowdown triggered by Covid-19 and cheaper oil, most initiatives targeted business owners rather than employees.
Kuwait has one of the region's smallest stimulus packages. Still, top lender National Bank of Kuwait SAK predicts the country's budget shortfall will reach 40% of gross domestic product in the fiscal year that started April 1, the most since the 1991 Gulf War and its aftermath. Most Gulf states are expected to run deficits of 15%-25% of economic output, leading to a build-up of debt, dwindling reserves, and tough choices.
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