Saudi women barrel into workforce in changing kingdom
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[November 04, 2021]
By Raya Jalabi
UNAIZAH, Saudi Arabia (Reuters) - Stepping
out of a shared taxi in central Riyadh, Reham Al-Ahmed walked into the
shopping mall where she works four days a week selling cosmetics.
Al-Ahmed, a high school graduate, is the first woman in her family to
have a job. Her parents had never wanted her to work but they eventually
relented as life in the capital became too expensive.
With steep new taxes and cuts to government subsidies, many families are
increasingly relying on women to work. In so doing, women are
negotiating a new place for themselves in their country's delicate
social fabric – a trend celebrated by some and watched suspiciously by
others in a country still tethered to its conservative traditions.
Al-Ahmed, who lives at home with her parents and five younger siblings,
chose a shop with mostly female clients to allay her parents' concerns
about mixing with men.
"I used to feel guilty asking my father for anything," the 24-year-old
said. "But since I started working, I'm proud I can help out my family."
Showing up to work across the country every day are thousands of women
like Al-Ahmed – unimaginable just a few years ago but now increasingly
the norm under reforms led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to
modernise the kingdom.
Saudi Arabia is highlighting its progress on women at a time of scrutiny
in the West over its human rights record, including a crackdown on
dissent that ensnared dozens of women's rights activists and the 2018
murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. An absolute monarchy, it permits
no political parties or elections.
Men still have a tight grip on power. There are currently no women in
King Salman's cabinet or in senior advisory roles, and the advisory
Shura Council has only 30 women members out of 150.
But women now make up 33% of Saudi's labour force – nearly double what
it was five years ago. Across age brackets and education levels, they
are taking up jobs previously restricted to Saudi men and migrant
workers in restaurants, supermarkets, accounting and graphic design
firms.
As part of the reforms, women have been allowed to drive since 2018. But
Al-Ahmed, who earns 4,500 riyals ($1,200) a month, cannot afford driving
lessons, let alone a car.
"I spend nearly a third of my salary on taxis," she said, and is saving
up for a car. "But I'm really happy to have a job, to earn my own money
finally. I never thought this would be possible for me."
A small number of women had long worked in Saudi Arabia but typically
held public sector jobs as teachers or medical workers, in keeping with
once-strict gender segregation rules.
But with looser restrictions on mixing, driving and some aspects of the
male guardianship system, firms are hiring more women than ever.
This is particularly true in retail and hospitality, sectors in which
the government launched a scheme in 2011 to replace cheaper foreign
workers with citizens to tackle Saudi unemployment, currently at 11%.
"A lot of jobs that are going to women were traditionally occupied by
non-Saudis," said economist Jennifer Peck. New laws have made it easier
for women to work in client-facing jobs.
According to her research, the number of Saudi women in the private
sector jumped to 935,508 in 2021 from 56,000 in 2010, and continues to
climb.
SOCIAL MORES
The changes are not just happening in Riyadh.
In Unaizah, a city in the conservative heartland of Qassim, attitudes
are shifting and more women are working despite wariness among some
about upending decades of tradition.
After graduating from university, Ghada al-Salman, 33, struggled to find
a job in Qassim, where women's unemployment still hovers at 18%, more
than three times the rate for men.
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A Saudi woman buys makeup from a cosmetic shop in Centria Mall in
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, October 22, 2021. REUTERS/Ahmed Yosri
She turned to baking, eventually opening three stores
that employ 45 people. At a recent date festival, she promoted her
Rose Ribbon Bakery, one of few women-owned businesses in Qassim.
"Without my parents, I wouldn't have been able to do any of this,"
she said, serving customers slices of date cake.
"Most fathers here would still not be okay with their daughters
working all day alongside men; even if they're the boss, even if
they're wearing the niqab."
Salman, like most women in public spaces in Unaizah, wears a
full-face covering and long black abaya. But she still faces
admonishment from older conservatives.
Happily eating one of her cupcakes, a man in his 60s complained
about the fast pace of social change.
"(The government) is telling us women must work – but that goes
against our traditions. In Islam, men take care of women," he said,
requesting anonymity.
GENDER PAY GAP
For others, the changes are overdue. Rana Alturki, 45, who joined
her father's oil and gas firm in 2000 as one of its first female
hires, worked for years in a gender-segregated office.
"Back then, the men were not even polite: no one would say good
morning or get in the elevator with me, they wouldn't even stand in
the same room as me," said Alturki, now an owner and manager at
Rawabi Holding Co.
"Thankfully, things have changed," said Alturki. "In my day, we were
too scared to even ask for a salary. But girls these days – they
come in and negotiate hard. They know their worth."
Despite this, the gender pay gap in Saudi Arabia stands at 49%,
according to research by NGO Al Nahda.
"Social attitudes still govern women's access to the labour market,"
said Hala al-Dosari, a U.S.-based Saudi women's rights expert, who
notes the bulk of new jobs for women are low-paying.
Although laws were introduced against harassment and discrimination,
they are not systematic and women are still being harassed and
denied their rights, Dosari said.
Some employers still ask women for their male guardian's approval
during hiring, the economist Peck said, despite recent reforms
giving women greater control over their lives.
One employer at a large company told Reuters he prefers to hire
women because "they work twice as hard, for half the pay". Nearly
all 400 firms interviewed by Peck's research group said Saudi
women's wages were lower, while a third said women were more
productive.
But for many Saudi women, these are just growing pains.
"Young women ask me all the time how they can do what I do," said
bakery owner Salman. "I tell them: 10 years ago, it would have been
impossible. But now, the future is yours."
($1 = 3.7508 riyals)
(Reporting by Raya Jalabi; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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