Over 15 million young people will enter the workforce over the next decade in
the Middle East and North Africa (Mena), presenting serious challenges for
regional governments, a report has claimed.
The Rapid Growth Markets (RGMs) Forecast report by Ernst & Young, a
market research company, said that Mena governments urgently need to develop the
non-oil economy to meet growth.
"The average annual growth rate in the labour force in Mena over the next 10
years is expected to be around 2 per cent," Bassam Hage, Mena markets leader at
Ernst & Young, said. "While a growing labour force adds to potential growth
in the region, creating jobs for this next generation in Mena will be one of the
most important economic developments."
IMF forecasts
According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), infrastructure investment
can have a sizeable impact on employment generation — about 40,000 annual direct
and indirect new jobs can be created in the short term for every $1 billion
spent on infrastructure projects, the report said. On this basis, 1 per cent of
GDP spent on the right kind of infrastructure projects could generate up to
87,000 new jobs in Egypt, for instance. Shady Shaher, economist at Standard
Chartered Bank, said: "You need to have an infrastructure in place and you need
to have a diversified economy because diversification will create jobs."
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