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ID171903
Title ProperSovereign risk
Other Title InformationGulf sovereign wealth funds as engines of growth and political resource
LanguageENG
AuthorYoung, Karen E
Summary / Abstract (Note)The economic reform agenda moving across the Gulf Cooperation Council states precipitated by the end of a decade-long run of high oil prices, high population growth rates, and costly demands on the provision of generous state services and subsidies has had some unexpected consequences. The reformulation of state-society relations, especially with regard to ideas of how to create economic growth and how to model a future social contract, challenges the accepted literature and construct of rentierism. This essay focuses on one distinctive site of these shifting relations between rentier states and their citizens: the sovereign wealth fund (SWF). SWFs are based upon the shared rents from oil production, but as they have evolved they are also becoming transformative in new national development strategies. Some SWFs now veer from traditional practices of safeguarding wealth to more experimental and high-risk strategies that claim to be able to diversify national economies from oil dependency, while also promising high returns. The current moment of late rentierism heightens questions of ownership and of the state’s role as guardian or steward of society’s wealth. Using SWFs to examine state-society relations and rentierism across the Gulf, this article focuses on the Saudi case.
`In' analytical NoteBritish Journal of Middle East Studies Vol. 47, No.1; Feb 2020: p.96-116
Journal SourceBritish Journal of Middle East Studies Vol: 47 No 1
Key WordsGulf Cooperation Council ;  Sovereign Risk ;  Gulf Sovereign Wealth ;  Political Resource


 
 
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