Home
/
Isiam
/
Politics & Economics
/
Yemen's battle for the economy
Yemen's battle for the economy
Jun 18, 2026 5:31 PM

  On a ridge of the rugged brown mountains that encircle Sanaa, the capital of Yemen, Qatari investors are building a little slice of the Gulf.

  "This project will be an icon of quality," promised Hassan Fadala, deputy CEO of operations at Qatari Diar, the real estate investment company pumping $600mn into Al Rayyan Hills, a luxury residential and retail development perched 100m above the southern side of the capital.

  "A turning point for real estate and tourism in Yemen," said Saad Sabra, chairman of Shibam Holding, the state's joint venture firm, set up last year to attract foreign investment.

  With 172 luxury villas, gated entrances guarded round the clock, a five star hotel, a sky-scraping apartment block and rows of luxury shops set among green trees, the development is certainly unprecedented in Yemen.

  But it cannot quite break the mould. Power and water are in short supply in Yemen, which is the poorest country in the Arab world. Rayyan Hills is unlikely to connect to the mains electricity network because if it did, every villa would need its own generator.

  The plan, according to Shibam, is to set up an "individual power plant" for Rayyan Hills, perhaps run on some of the country's newly-tapped gas resources.

  Diminishing resources

  And though the developers promise infrastructure that will conserve and recycle water, most experts believe Sanaa will become the world's first capital city to run out of economically sustainable water supplies in just ten years.

  According to government officials and local economists, it is the dismal economy and the drastic depletion of Yemen's natural resources, such as oil and water, that are the country's most pressing concerns.

  Yemen's raw figures would make even the most hardy policy planner's head spin. Over three-quarters of the state budget, which this year totaled around $8.76bn, according to Mostafa Nasser, chairman of the Economic Media Centre in Sanaa, comes from oil revenues.

  Though ministers insist most of Yemen's land remains unexplored for oil, there have been only limited new discoveries in the past five years and production has fallen from 450,000 barrels per day (bpd) in 2003 to roughly 280,000 bpd at the beginning of this year.

  The World Bank estimates that by 2017 the government will earn no income from oil at all.

  Economy on the brink

  Unicef, the UN's children fund, reports that nearly half of all Yemeni children are malnourished.

  Couple this with unemployment topping 37 per cent - health indicators comparable to Sub-Saharan Africa - and a population growing at one of the fastest rates in the world, and it appears the economy is heading for break down.

  Not so, says Jalal Yaqoub, the deputy finance minister and author of a ten-point plan to rescue Yemen's economy from the brink. Not, that is, if the drastic reforms the plan outlines can be implemented within its schedule of the next 20 months.

  "Declining revenues from oil are the critical issue. Oil production has been going down steadily since 2003 and we have not been able to attract big oil companies to come and search for more," said Yaqoub. "Also, we are hemorrhaging money on fuel subsidies - one quarter to one third of the state budget."

  And as with most development issues in Yemen, one crisis is inter-connected with another: the subsidized diesel is used in pumps to draw water for agriculture, which accounts for some 90 per cent of water use in the country.

  "Last year we estimate we used one billion liters of diesel only for water pumps around Yemen. Subsidizing $0.70 per liter of diesel, the government in effect paid $700mn to subsidize the depletion of water in the country," said Yaqoub.

  Gas powered future?

  The plan is to reduce the consumption of diesel by producing electricity from a new gas-fired power station and securing better long terms prices on oil imports.

  In the years before the new power station comes online, the government is considering importing up to a dozen gas-fired mobile power stations, which arrive in pieces in shipping containers and can be assembled within a few weeks at sites across the country.

  Yaqoub estimates that the state can save up to $250mn on subsidies and fuel imports annually - money which could then be spent on highly visible public works projects to give average Yemenis a feeling their government is working for them.

  He insists that consumer prices must not rise as a result of reforms, recalling the day of rioting in 2005 when cooking gas doubled in price and 13 people died.

  Perhaps most radical of the ten points of the plan, which includes conservation of water, developing the port of Aden, enforcing the rule of law and repairing Yemen's international image, is the aim to attract 100 professional Yemenis, most of them from abroad, into key civil service posts.

  The finance ministry, for example, aims to headhunt up to 30 new members to run its operations. With many of those, like Yaqoub, educated in Europe or the US and only having recently returned to Yemen, the vested interests of the powers that are already calling the move a "silent coup".

  'Making economic miracles'

  "They say: 'Who do these people think they are?' They call us the shadow cabinet," said Yaqoub. "But the current cabinet needs to focus on priorities in line with the ten-point plan in order to create economic momentum in the country."

  The ten-point plan was endorsed by Ali Abdullah Saleh, the president, in August and is overseen by his son and potential heir Ahmad Ali Abdullah Saleh. McKinsey, the international consulting firm, has reportedly been hired to assist in the reform process, while US-based Chemonics, a development consultancy, is also in talks on cooperation.

  Not everyone, though, is convinced Yaqoub and the new generation of technocrats can pull off the economic miracle needed to save Yemen.

  "The new blood in Yemen's economy is not for reform, but to prepare the way for the son of the president," said Mostafa Nasser of Sanaa's Economic Media Centre. "The problem is not in personnel but in corruption which has infected all institutions."

  Resistance to the plan is also expected from the powerful tribes, who allegedly carry out kidnapping raids and block major roads to the capital in order to force the government to adhere to their wishes.

  The new blood promise a zero-tolerance policy to tribal muscle flexing, but as Yaqoub admits: "We are stepping on so many toes."

  "When we were asleep no one noticed us. Now the president has come with new ideas and there is a rebellion against him by many forces," said government adviser Nidal al-Hyme.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Map of Yemen

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Politics & Economics
Seeking shelter in Iraqi Kurdistan
  Holding her son's death certificate in one hand, Layla Awad explained that she had been provided with basic aid but struggles financially after the men in her family were killed in November.   "Both of my sons are dead but I have not been given their pension yet," she said.   Awad's...
UN study details widespread abuse of children
  A UN report states that around 120 million girls worldwide have been forced to have sex and that globally one-fifth of murder victims from both sexes are under 20 years old, resulting in 95,000 deaths in 2012.   Drawing on data from 190 countries, the report released on Thursday from the...
Anti-Palestinian arson attacks on the rise
  This week, Giacinto-Boulos Marcuzzo, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Nazareth had a note delivered at his home. It warned that he and his followers had until May 5 to leave the "land of Israel". On Tuesday April 29, Israeli police announced that a Jewish man from Safed had been arrested...
Egypt's Rabaa deaths 'crime against humanity'
  A new report has alleged that the Egyptian security forces' killings of at least 1,000 protesters at the Rabaa al-Adawiya Square sit-in last year in Cairo "most likely amount to crimes against humanity".   The 195-page Human Rights Watch (HRW) report released on Tuesday found that Egyptian security forces "gunned down...
Amnesty: Torture is alive and flourishing
  The use of torture is widespread 30 years after the United Nations adopted a convention outlawing the practice, Amnesty International has said.   At least 44 percent of more than 21,000 people from 21 countries surveyed by the London-based rights group for its new report released on Monday, said that they...
UN: S Sudan children facing starvation
  More than 50,000 children in South Sudan face death from disease and hunger, the United Nations has warned while seeking over $1bn to support those hit by six months of civil war.   "The consequences could be dire: 50,000 children could die this year if they do not get assistance," UN...
UN: Record 50 million people now displaced
  The United Nations refugee agency has said that at the end of last year more than 50 million people had been forced from their homes worldwide, the highest figure of displaced people since World War II.   In its annual Global Trends report, released on Friday, UNHCR said that out of...
Palestinian double-refugees struggle in Gaza
  "Death was all over the place. Projectiles were not stopping … we miraculously fled the camp."   This is how Palestinian refugee Alaa Barakat described his last moments in Yarmouk refugee camp in Damascus in December 2012. Barakat lived in the camp with his wife and two children, a three-year-old and...
UN: Seven million people need aid in Sudan
  Almost seven million people in Sudan are in urgent need of aid after the influx of refugees from the conflicts in Darfur and South Sudan worsened the crisis in the African nation, the UN said.   The figure is a jump from the United Nations' previous estimate of 6.1 million, issued...
Report: Racism becoming more widespread in France
  Racism has increased among French people according to an annual report by the French National Consultative Commission on Human Rights (CNCDH) on the fight against racism.   The report released Tuesday said 35 percent of surveyed French people acknowledged being racist comparing to 29 percent in 2012. Nine percent among them...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved