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Serving Clients in the Middle East - Public Sector

The countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) are at a unique inflection point in their histories. Buoyed by unprecedented oil wealth, the GCC has a window of opportunity to completely transform their economies and their societies. Where leaders traditionally invested their wealth abroad to yield returns of capital, a new and energetic generation of leaders is looking to invest in their own countries.
Jorg, Partner

The result has been a commitment to massive transformation that focuses on reforming education, labour, and health care systems.

Reforming Education, Creating Opportunities
Having largely achieved the once-distant goal of providing free access to primary and secondary education for all nationals, the GCC states are now facing a much thornier challenge: raising the quality of that education. To make further progress, they must shift their focus—above all, to improving the skills of teachers and managing the overall performance of their school systems. Some GCC states (notably Bahrain, Qatar, and the UAE) are making a start.
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Getting Health Care Right
Health care is an increasing concern for the governments of the Gulf GCC states want the private sector to play a much more active role in providing and financing that care. Gulf-area health care systems may be far better than they were 20 years ago, but many residents remain unsatisfied with the availability and quality of care at government-run hospitals and clinics. Government agencies mostly lack the managerial skills needed to run health care facilities, and cash incentives alone haven't been enough to attract specialists to treat the rising number of people with ailments such as heart disease and cancer.

Government-run hospitals and clinics are also ill prepared for a rapidly growing and aging population, as well as for the rise in chronic diseases such as diabetes, whose prevalence has grown as countries have developed. To augment services and raise standards of care, some GCC governments have already encouraged internationally renowned academic institutions to set up health care facilities in their countries. Many more private health care providers are required, however, to meet future demand. Big changes to government policy and regulation are needed to ensure that private players can attract patients and succeed. The most important change: governments must reimburse nationals for private as well as public health care.
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