Renegotiating the Ruling Bargain: Selling Fiscal Reform in the GCC
Abstract
Built upon depletable reservoirs of oil and natural gas, the petro-states of the Arab Gulf
have, since their beginning, always had one eye fixated on the end: the exhaustion of their
life-giving natural resources, and the radical economic and potentially political transformations
that promise as a result. For decades, the steady countdown of this doomsday clock
has both framed and impelled government efforts to guarantee a more ordered transition
to the post-oil era, including via economic diversification, labor market reforms, spending
on tertiary education, and investment through sovereign wealth funds. Now, however, depressed
oil prices and a changing strategic environment are working to upend this long-term
time horizon, and with it the basic economic-cum-political calculus underpinning the Gulf
state model. No longer is the task of leaders to shepherd in a viable system for the days after
oil, but to sustain the existing rentier system under new fiscal and geopolitical realities. And
to that end Gulf rulers have begun to exercise once-unthinkable policy options that could
fundamentally alter their relationships with each other, their citizens, and the imported labor
upon which their economies depend.
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/4699Collections
- Social & Economic Survey Research Institute Research [280 items ]