Opinion — Gulf Times Now
The narrative around women in GCC business has shifted more dramatically in the past five years than in the preceding fifty. From Saudi Arabia’s lifting of the driving ban to the UAE’s progressive policies on gender parity in federal ministries, structural and cultural changes are creating genuine pathways for women to lead organisations, build companies, and shape industries across the Gulf. This shift is not cosmetic — it is increasingly backed by data, policy, and economic incentive.
The Data Tells a Transforming Story
Female labour force participation in the UAE has grown significantly and continues to track upward. Saudi Arabia — which had among the world’s lowest female labour force participation rates just a decade ago — has seen the female participation rate roughly double as Vision 2030 targets have been backed by concrete policy changes. The UAE cabinet has included female ministers at senior levels, and the federal strategy specifically targets gender balance in government leadership roles.
In entrepreneurship, women-led businesses in the GCC are growing in number and scale. The UAE’s ecosystem — with Hub71, Dubai Future Foundation, and an active venture capital community — has produced a cohort of female founders building businesses in healthcare, technology, sustainability, and consumer goods. Platforms like ShAb Dubai and various GCC-focused female entrepreneur networks have created community and support structures that reduce the isolation that has historically been a barrier to women building businesses.
Where Progress Is Still Needed
Honest assessment requires acknowledging where gaps remain. Women are underrepresented in board-level positions across GCC public companies, the pipeline of female candidates for C-suite roles in private sector companies remains thinner than it should be, and the distribution of women in business leadership varies significantly by sector (strong in healthcare, education, and public sector; weaker in energy, construction, and financial services). Access to capital for female founders remains more challenging than for their male counterparts, a pattern seen globally but particularly acute in relationship-driven GCC funding networks.
What Businesses Should Do
For companies operating in the GCC, the business case for gender diversity is increasingly evidence-based — diverse leadership teams make better decisions, and companies with strong female representation outperform on multiple financial metrics over time. Proactive investment in identifying, developing, and retaining female talent is not just a social good but a competitive strategy. As GCC governments continue to reward companies that contribute to national gender diversity goals through procurement preferences and regulatory recognition, the incentive to lead on this issue rather than follow is growing stronger.
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