Date: 2014
Type: Technical Report
Demography, migration and labour market in Saudi Arabia
Technical Report, GLMM, Explanatory note, 1/2014, Migration Policy Centre
DE BEL-AIR, Françoise, Demography, migration and labour market in Saudi Arabia, GLMM, Explanatory note, 1/2014, Migration Policy Centre - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/32151
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
Saudi Arabia is a prime destination and source of remittances from workers for many countries in Asia and the Arab world. As of mid-2013, expatriates made up 32 percent of the Kingdom's population, most of them coming from South Asia. They accounted for 56.5 percent of the employed population and 89 percent of the private sector workforce. Since September 2011, and in spite of a spurt in foreign labour recruitment starting in the mid-2000s, a voluntary policy called Nitaqat aims at 'Saudising' the Kingdom's workforce. The most recent data also show the scale of the irregular migration phenomenon in Saudi Arabia: the amnesty campaign which started in April 2013 allowed 4.7 million foreign workers to regularise their status, while an ongoing crackdown on illegals forced one million to leave the Kingdom in 2013 alone, of which (as of November 30, 2013) 547,000 were deported.
Additional information:
GLMM - Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/32151
Series/Number: GLMM; Explanatory note; 1/2014; Migration Policy Centre
Keyword(s): Amnesty Citizenship Deportation Foreign population Irregularity Migration policy National population Nationals & foreign labour Saudi Arabia Saudisation Statistics
Sponsorship and Funder information:
The GLMM programme is conducted by the Gulf Research Centre (GRC) and the Migration Policy Centre (MPC) and financed by the Open Society Foundations (OSF).
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