1st Edition

The Political Economy of Saudi Arabia

By Tim Niblock, Monica Malik Copyright 2007
    280 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    280 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    With Saudi Arabia being of immense importance both politically and economically in the Middle East, this book provides a much needed, broad ranging survey of the development of the Saudi economy from the 1960s to the present day.

    Written by a highly reputable author, the book includes an analysis of how political and social factors have shaped policy, and how the Saudi state is coping with the dynamics of a rapidly changing economic and political situation.

    1. Introduction  2. Laying the Basis for Development, 1962-70  3. Planning for Transformation, 1970-85  4. Constrained Development, 1985-2000  5. Attitudes of the Business Elite, 1970-2000  6. Planning for Reform, 2000-6  7. The Record of Reform: Progress, Constraints and Requirements 

    Biography

    Tim Niblock is Professor in the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies at the University of Exeter, UK.

    Monica Malik has worked for a number of international financial institutions as senior economist for the Middle East, and is currently based in Dubai.

    'Professor Niblock’s tautly-argued, factual, analysis offers the keys to the Saudi Kingdom to everyone interested in seriously understanding the political economy of contemporary Arabia.'-  Sir Sherard Cowper-Coles KCMG LVO, HM Ambassador, Kabul.

    'This is a most profound and revealing survey, packed with fresh research, sharp analysis, and new understanding. Tim Niblock writes so lucidly and logically, combining inside knowledge with detached academic scrutiny. He makes sense of the Saudi economy in the recent past and today, weighing its potential and problems, and asking the right questions about the future. This elegant, masterful, yet most accessible book is a must for anyone doing business in the Kingdom - or contemplating it.'- Robert Lacey, author of The Kingdom: Arabia and the House of Saud.

    'No economy in the world is at once as opaque and as strategically significant as that of Saudi Arabia. While its oil output and revenues play a major role in the functioning of the world economy, Saudi Arabia is a major player in the Middle Eastern region, even as it confronts a range of major policy issues at home, in regard to employment, the participation of women, skills and immigration. The authors of this pioneering study, Professor Tim Niblock and Monica Malik, have performed an important service in addressing these issues in a volume that is as rich in detail as it is measured in comment. It promises to be the standard work on the topic.' - Professor Fred Halliday, Professor of International Relations, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK

    'This compact volume is a model of clarity in laying out its assumptions and presenting the data, without glossing over the hazards of relying on official statistics. The writing is brisk and refreshingly free of jargon. In terms of the core message, the depiction of distinctive phases of economic planning and policy refutes simplistic accounts that portray Saudi Arabia as stagnant. This book most certainly belongs on library shelves and on the reading lists of courses with the contemporary Middle East' - David Commins, Dickinson College, International Journal of Middle East Studies, August 2009