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Qatar to cut expat workforce by 40%

by This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it  on Wednesday, 05 September 2007
The government also wants to limit population growth in its capital Doha. (Getty Images)

Qatar plans to cut its expatriate working population from its current 88% to 50% by 2025 under new proposals by the Gulf state’s development planning office.

The gradual cutback is expected to see the number of expat workers in Qatar first reduced to 70% by 2010, Qatar daily The Peninsula reported today.

The plan - put forward by the population committee of the General Secretariat for Development Planning - aims to gradually reduce Qatar’s dependence on expatriate workers and to mobilise local Qataris to join the workforce.

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According to a report last month, only 12% of the country's workforce is made up of nationals.

The new proposals also call for plans to limit the growing population in Doha, estimating the capital will see its population soar to around one million by 2025. Doha’s population was just 339,847 in 2004.

The move comes as a study on urban development and internal migration last month claimed expatriate labourers are proving to be more of a financial burden to Qatar than providing any benefits for it.

The study from Qatar’s Population Research Permanent Committee claimed the government pays 3,500 Qatari riyals ($961) per month for each person coming into the country in the low-income category, the newspaper reported.

In 1997, 235,000 foreign workers accounted for 84% of the workforce. In 2004, there were 391,000 expat workers, while the population stood at 744,029, according to the study.

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