07/10/2015 08:14 AST

Bahrain will make investments of more than $20 billion over the coming years in large scale industrial and infrastructure projects, the GCC development fund, as well as government and private sector investment, a top official has said.

Economic Development Board (EDB) chief economist Dr Jarmo Kotilaine told a panel discussion during the First Annual Global Employers’ Summit yesterday that this is aimed at spurring public and private sector participation across the manufacturing, energy, healthcare and education sectors.

This includes a commitment to build 25,000 housing units over the coming four-year period. He said it was also a reflection of Bahrain’s diversification efforts over the past decade and the general resilience of the GCC economies at a time of doubt about the global recovery.

EDB is the semi-private autonomous agency responsible for formulating the country’s future economic development strategy.

“Even as the hydrocarbons sector experiences a decline, headline real gross domestic product expanded by 2.9 per cent last year and we continue to project robust growth throughout this year and the next,” he said.

Dr Kotilaine said forward-looking indicators point to a high degree of continuity in the regional non-oil economy, reflecting the strength of key structural growth drivers and the commitment of regional governments and investors to long-term projects.

“Bahrain has been a trading outpost along the old Silk Road connecting the Gulf to the world for thousands of years, due to its strategic role as a gateway for mobilising foreign direct investment and trade facilitation between the countries of the Maritime and Continental Silk Road.”

The welcoming business environment and skilled workforce contributed to the growth of the country’s economy and success of its business story, he added.

The kingdom has some of the lowest operating costs in the region and tried and tested regulations that meet international standards and the best practice worldwide implemented for the development of entrepreneurs and micro, small and medium enterprises in Bahrain, he said.

Bahrain’s open business environment has attracted international business from around the world looking to access the fast-growing GCC market, currently worth $1.6 trillion and expected to reach $2trn by 2020.

The panel discussion titled ‘Doing Business in the Gulf Region’ was moderated by BCCI first vice-chairman Othman Alrayes.

Other panellists were Kuwait Chamber of Commerce and Industry director general Rabah Al Rabah, Federation of UAE Chambers of Commerce and Industry vice-chairman Abdulla Al Owais and Council of Saudi Chambers’ Dr Saud Al Omari.


Gulf Daily News

Ticker Price Volume
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941
Saudi Public Investment Fund signs agreement with Six Flags to create amusement park in Riyadh

05/04/2018

Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) has signed an agreement with Six Flags to develop and design an amusement park in Riyadh. Six Flags, the world’s leading international amusement park compa

Arab News

Green energy drive will boost KSA employment: Saudi Arabia’s renewable energy chief

05/04/2018

In an exclusive interview with Arab News, Turki Mohammed Al-Shehri explains how an expanding renewables industry will boost employment as well as pave the way for a greener future.

A massiv

Arab News

Dubai house prices, rents drop in first quarter of 2018

05/04/2018

Dubai’s residential property market continued to soften in the first three months of this year, in line with analysts’ forecasts, with rental values recording a more pronounced fall than sales prices

The National

Saudi Arabia lifts GCC index buoyed by strong oil prices

05/04/2018

Buoyed by a strong oil price of $70 per barrel, Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul shot up by over 6 per cent in March 2018, according to Kuwait Financial Centre’s (Markaz’s) recently released Monthly Markets Re

Times of Oman

Banks’ real estate credit at QR147.7bn

05/04/2018

Qatar banks’ combined credit facilities to real estate sector rose by QR17bn to QR147.7bn in 2017. The banks’ credit to various sectors stood at QR911bn at the end of 2017, up from QR839bn recorded i

The Peninsula