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In the GCC, Regulation Beats Oil Revenue for AI Workforce Readiness
Published 1 week, 6 days ago
Description
What actually determines AI workforce readiness in the Gulf? A new peer-reviewed study of 47 AI initiatives across all six GCC nations — Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Oman — delivers a finding that challenges the default assumption: it's not the wealthiest nations that lead, it's the ones with the most coherent regulatory frameworks.
Researchers Albous, Stephens, and Al-Jayyousi (2025), publishing in Springer Nature, found that regulatory harmonisation outperforms GDP and oil revenue as a predictor of AI workforce outcomes. Countries with structured AI governance frameworks consistently out-readied their neighbours on every workforce metric — regardless of how much they could spend.
The study also surfaces a warning that HR leaders across the region should take seriously: a two-track talent system is forming. On one side, a small elite of AI researchers and specialists. On the other, a much larger workforce with surface-level AI exposure. That gap, if unaddressed, risks becoming a permanent feature of GCC labour markets — and of the companies operating within them.
For HR leaders running multi-country GCC operations, the data has direct implications: readiness scores range from 0.57 to 0.90 across the six nations, meaning the talent pools you're drawing from are genuinely different market to market. And tools that work in high-readiness environments may need recalibration where governance infrastructure is still catching up.