Quotes: US MENA   Enter Symbol: NewsLetter: Search: advanced

Saudi- Al-Said: Seniors must heed voice of youth  Join our daily free Newsletter

MENAFN - Arab News - 25/12/2012

No. of Ratings : 0
Digg This Article: http%3a%2f%2fwww.menafn.com%2fmenafn%2fqn_news_story_s.aspx%3fstoryid%3d1093592984%26title%3dSaudi-AlSaid-Seniors-must-heed-voice-of-youth%26src%3dRSS Share This Article: http%3a%2f%2fwww.menafn.com%2fmenafn%2fqn_news_story_s.aspx%3fstoryid%3d1093592984%26title%3dSaudi-AlSaid-Seniors-must-heed-voice-of-youth%26src%3dRSS Add to Delicious Seed this article Buzz this article Add to Reddit Add to furl Add to stumbleupon Add to Mixx!


 


Fahad A. M. Al-Said, CEO of Saudi Real Estate Co. Al-Akaria, during an interview with Arab News at his head office in Riyadh.
(MENAFN - Arab News) Addressing the dreams of Saudi youth, creating medium businesses and adopting training as well as long-term planning are the three main goals that Dr. Fahad A.M Al-Said, CEO of Saudi Real Estate Co. Al-Akaria, sets for the Kingdom's development.

In an exclusive interview with Diana Al-Jassem of Arab News at his head office in Riyadh, Al-Said says Saudi society is the one that has put restrictions over the Saudi Culture in general, and woman in particular.

He also says that housing is a growing problem that can be addressed once the government and private sectors and individuals push forward their initiatives in a joint venture effort.

Rapid change

What, in your opinion, are changes that would have a major impact on the lives of Saudi nationals in the coming 20 years?
There are two major changes that I hope to see very soon.

Number one is training, and number two is the reduction of family size in Saudi Arabia. We have to carefully apply these two steps.

I always say that 'you can cash Saudi riyal in any place in the world, if we train Saudis to be cashable in any place of the world,.' Saudi Arabia is an international market, so we do have a problem with training and we have to handle it.

In terms of family size, we can see now that 70 percent of the Saudi population is less than 20 years old.

In late eighties, we had a baby boom, which created tremendous pressure on our society, economy, services, etc.

Saudi Arabia has the biggest birth rate in the world estimated at 5.2. We have to look at the rate of birth.

The Saudi population used to be eight million, but now we are 17 million. This rate of increase scares me.

We have to convince people to start reducing the number of births.

There are three interconnected duties for every society, which are education, training and jobs.

Only few years ago we started having best universities in the world.

We need on job training, institutional training and virtual reality training.

Role of leadership

What do you think of the leadership roles for organizations in the Kingdom? What are the factors/reasons for their current state?
Leaders at private and public firms should be doers not talkers.

Anyone in management position has to realize the mentality of the youth is different from that of their seniors. Youth need actions, plans and tangible results.

I believe that the biggest challenge facing the mangers and leaders of private and public firms in Saudi organizations is convincing youth by being action takers, not talkers.

There is a gap between senior thinking and youth thinking, where youth thinking is better.

Challenging tasks

What are the most difficult decisions that need to be applied in the Kingdom in the next 20 years?
The first decision is to adopt training in the right direction. The second decision is to improve the well being of the youth by offering houses, education, health care, and many other services.

Sustainable development

What goals would you set for the Kingdom's development and how do you think these goals can be achieved?
We are having difficulties with regulations that are mostly in force since the 50s.

It served good in the previous ages, but now these regulations should be changed. What I have seen so far is that we have cosmetic changes but not original changes.

Now, we need new bylaws that cope with changes occurring socially, and economically.

What characteristics do you think are important for officials, and how these characteristics could contribute toward the Kingdom's development?

Speak the language of 70 percent of the population, which is youth. We have to learn youth language, habits and way of communication. Any decision maker has to match or at least understand the way youth express themselves.

Creative project

Give us an example of the most creative project you wish to establish in the Kingdom.

Training programs would be the best projects in the coming 20 years.

I hope to see such projects in the future. We have to look carefully in the knowledge-based economy that needs two major foundations - education and training.

KSA in three words

What three words would you use to describe the Kingdom in the coming 20 years?

I can describe the Kingdom using the words - flourishing continuous development. I do have strong trust in Saudi youth.

I can say that every student is more intelligent than the older student generation. Our future is for the youth, and I strongly have trust on them.

Human rights

How can we all improve human rights in Saudi Arabia? What are your expectations regarding human rights practices in the coming 20 years?

Human rights have three levels that start with the family, society - then the laws of the country.

I cannot ask for human rights for a family or a community that doesn't give human rights to individuals.

We are now transferring from culture/family-based society to an institutionalized community.

Biggest challenge

What is the challenge facing the Kingdom today?

Preparing Saudis through training for jobs and offering houses are the major challenges facing the Kingdom today.

Youth usually have high expectations from the future and 70 percent of Saudis are youth. Our challenge is to prepare them, make them ready for jobs.

There are several concepts that we need to raise and discuss with our youth and make them accept all types of jobs.

We have to train them how to communicate with clients, how to answer, how to discuss, how to be responsible, how to challenge, and many such skills.

Prominent economic activity

What are the most prominent economic activities in the Kingdom? And what are the neglected sectors?

Prominent sectors are knowledge-based economy, petrochemical industry, and renewable energy. We have to focus on neglected businesses, which are mid-size businesses.

In Saudi Arabia, the person can be an individual worker or owner of a giant company. The mid-size businesses do not exist anymore.

Housing growth

There is a huge demand for housing in the Kingdom because of rising young population.

The government has also put an emphasis on this sector as it allocated SR 250 billion in this year's budget for housing. Do you believe housing sector needs much more attention from the government and private sector?

Between 1975-1995 we built 3.2 million units in Saudi Arabia. So we are capable to build houses. Statistics now show that we need 2.5 million housing units.

We need a joint effort of both public and private sectors to fill the gap and work together.

Housing problems can be solved easily though dividing the responsibility among government, private sector and individuals.

Mortgage law is a helpful tool to mid- and high-income people worldwide. Low-income people will not benefit from the mortgage law.

Role of SMEs

There is a need to boost small and medium enterprises (SMEs) sector in the Kingdom as it creates various jobs. What role do you see for SMEs in the Kingdom's economic development?

We do have small businesses in every sector. When I say small I mean one individual.

To have middle-level businesses, we need to have a group of people, from 5 to 15, who work in such businesses. We cannot have a group of people to sustain their business. This is because the Saudi economy is gigantic and seasonal.

Knowledge hunt

Education is always a top priority of the Saudi government. What changes do you envisage in the education system befitting Saudi youth in a knowledge-based economy?

I used to teach at King Fahd University that is among high ranked universities. We started with eight universities, but now thankfully we have 21 universities across 13 provinces of Saudi Arabia.

Now we are in a knowledge-based global economy, brain is working now more than muscles. I am waiting for the day to see Saudi nationals compete for jobs worldwide.

Fair opportunities

How do you see Saudi women's contribution in the labor sector and social and political arenas in the next 20 years? What is required in order for Saudi women to actualize your future vision?

Our problem is that we place differences between men and women. Our society creates the difference. Most of the obstacles placed in front of women are because of the society not the system.

For example, till the beginning of 1980s there was no law to ban women from driving. Our Saudi society created that movement till it had been approved by officials and became a law.

Our society had placed restrictions, so each Saudi man is undergoing these restrictions himself to satisfy the society. We shape our society, and then our society shapes us.

Saudi media

What measures and standards are yet to be introduced to Saudi media, and what are your expectations over the next 20 years? What impact will social media have on traditional media?

I would love a regulatory body to control our media. We need a regulatory body even for the new media.

Technology is helpful to facilitate communication and I think it has a great impact on the coming generation. We have to use the new technology in our media. The competition between traditional and new media is normal.

Learning from the past

What are three or four mistakes that have been repeated in the Kingdom during the past 10 decades and how could we eliminate them in order to develop the Kingdom?

1) Yearly planning versus planning four or 10 years is a mistake that we should avoid. Businesses and economies need more than one year to execute plans.

2) A change in our 1950s regulations is required. Regulations of the fifties don't work in the current age.
3) Actions speak louder than words.

Message to youth

Given that youth make up the majority of the Saudi population, what message would you want conveyed to them? What else would you say to the rest of the population?

Youth have to realize that there is no substitute for hard work, and come up through education and training. I have full trust in youth.

* * *

Al-Said's top goals

Major changes required in:
- Boosting training system
- Reducing future family size

The leadership role should focus on:
- Actions speaks louder than words

Challenging tasks are:
- Adopt training in the right direction
- Improve the well being of the youth

Describing the Kingdom in three words:
- Flourishing continuous development

Biggest challenge:
- Preparing youth for jobs through training
- Offering houses and other well being for youth

Requirements for housing development:
- Dividing responsibilities among government, private sector and individuals

Role of SMEs:
- To have mid-size businesses is a challenge

Education needs:
- More training courses and more qualified teachers
- Retraining to prepare workers to take up positions of higher responsibility

About Saudi women:
- Society places obstacles in front of women

Mistakes could be avoided through:
- Yearly planning versus four or ten years of planning
- Change of our 1950s regulations
- Replace talkers with doers

Message to youth:
- Inherit the spirit of hard work
- Strive for more training and education

 






  MENA News Headlines
May 18 2013India Walmart lobby case 'closed' ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) India's investigation into whether Walmart may have bribed Indian officials to gain wider access to the country's vast market has been "closed" due to lack of evidence, a report said ...

May 18 2013Morocco to harness the wind in energy hunt ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Morocco is ploughing ahead with a programme to boost wind energy production, particularly in the southern Tarfaya region, where Africa's largest wind farm is set to open in ...

May 18 2013Facebook exec says it's OK for women to cry at work ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg said in an interview published Saturday says it's ok for women to cry at work, share emotions and be honest about their ...

May 18 2013India could face junk status, S&P warns ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) India faces at least "a one-in-three" chance of losing its prized sovereign grade rating, global ratings agency Standard and Poor's has warned, amid new threats to economic growth ...

May 18 2013Three new suicides at Apple supplier's China factory ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Three Foxconn workers have committed suicide at a factory in China in the past three weeks, a labour rights group said on Saturday. All three jumped to their deaths at a plant in ...

May 18 2013Hong Kong launches first electric taxis ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Hong Kong saw its first electric taxis hit the streets on Saturday in a step towards reducing the city's high levels of roadside pollution. The 45 bright red cars were launched by ...

May 18 2013New case of SARS-like virus in Saudi: ministry ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) A new case of the deadly coronavirus has been detected in Saudi Arabia where 15 people have already died after contracting it, the health ministry announced on Saturday on its ...

May 18 2013Despair over spread of spot-fixing 'cancer' ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) The arrest of three Indian cricketers for spot-fixing has prompted new fears over the growing influence of betting mafias on the game in the subcontinent and despair about the ...

May 18 2013China Provides Tunisia with A Grant Worth $13 Million ,Qatar News Agency
(MENAFN - Qatar News Agency) China offered Tunisia a grant worth nearly $13 million , about 20 million Tunisian Dinar, for developmental projects to be specified later, the Tunisian foreign ministry ...

May 18 2013Yahoo Japan suspects 22 million IDs stolen ,AFP
(MENAFN - AFP) Yahoo Japan Corp. has said it suspects up to 22 million user IDs may have been stolen during an unauthorised attempt to access the administrative system of its Yahoo! Japan ...

more...


 
MENAFN






Google

 
 

Middle East North Africa - Financial Network

MENAFN News Market Data Countries Tools Section  
 

Middle East North Africa - Financial Network
Arabic MENAFN

Main News
News By Industry
News By Country
Marketwatch News
UPI News
Comtex News

IPO News
Islamic Finance News
Private Equity News

How-To Guides
Technology Section

Travel Section

Search News

Market Indices
Quotes & Charts

Global Indices
Arab Indices

US Markets Details

Commodoties

Oil & Energy

Currencies Cross Rates
Currencies Updates
Currency Converter

USA Stocks
Arab Stocks
 

Algeria 
Bahrain 
Egypt 
Iraq
Jordan 
Kuwait 
Lebanon
Morocco 
Oman 
Palestine
Qatar 
Saudi Arabia 
Syria
Tunisia 
UAE 
Yemen

Weather
Investment Game
Economic Calendar
Financial Glossary

My MENAFN
Portfolio Tracker

Voting

Financial Calculators

RSS Feeds [XML]

Corporate Monitor

Events

Real Estate
Submit Your Property

Arab Research
Buy a Research

Press Releases
Submit your PR

Join Newsletters


 
© 2000 menafn.com All Rights Reserved.  Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise | About MENAFN | Career Opportunities | Feedback | Help