Why last year's rise in unemployment for Saudi women might be a positive trend
For Saudi women, unemployment rates are climbing, while they’re
dropping for Saudi men and non-Saudi workers, according to
government data.
New statistics recently released by Saudi Arabia's Central
Department of Statistics and Information (CDSI) reveals that
unemployment for women in Saudi Arabia rose from 34.0% to 35.7%
from the first to fourth quarter of 2012, while unemployment for
men dropped, from 6.9% to 6.0%.
Unemployment rates in
Saudi Arabia by Quarter, 2012
Unemployment for non-Saudis is much lower than that of Saudis,
according to these statistics, reaching 0.07% for men and 0.18% for
women (this makes sense given that the majority of foreigners are
present in the country to work).
These statistics imply that 64.3% of women are employed, while in
2010, a report
released by the World Economic Forum estimated that only 22% of
women were present in the workforce, up from 20% in 2009.
Yet the slight increase in unemployment for Saudi women isn’t a
negative trend; it’s driven by the fact that more women are
entering the workforce, says
Khalid AlKhudair of Glowork, an online platform based in
Riyadh that helps connect women to employment in Saudi Arabia.
“The facts are correct,” he said, “and that is not because there
aren’t job opportunities, it is because there are more women
graduating than ever before. 500,000 women have graduated in the
past 10 years as opposed to 300,000 men, and the numbers are
rising. With new laws in place to encourage equal
opportunities for women in the labor market, the future is
bright."
Last year, the
U.N. found that 52% of university graduates in Saudi Arabia
were women. If AlKhudair’s statistics are right, that gap is
continuing to expand. Glowork is designed to help employ these
graduates, by allowing them to work from home and circumvent the
difficulties of segregation laws at work. "60% of women who have
PhDs are unemployed, AlKhudair said when we
interviewed him last year.
Now, he says, "This has definitely changed, due to companies hiring
more women in leadership roles."
[Don't forget to register for our Wamda for Women roundtables in Riyadh this
May 30th and in Doha and Amman on the 20th and 24th, to discuss how
women can lead the way in changing the status quo].