Deccan Chronicle

Saudi now willing to take up ‘lowly’ jobs

With government slashing subsidies, demand for such jobs are rising

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Riyadh, Aug. 1: Dishing out burgers and fries slathered with melted cheese, “One Way Burger” is like any other trendy food truck in Riyadh. But it offers something rare — the cook behind the sizzling hot grill is a Saudi.

In the once tax-free petro-state, which long offered its citizens cradleto-grave welfare, blue-collar occupation­s such as cooking, cleaning and working at gas stations have largely been the preserve of foreign workers, who far outnumber Saudis.

But Saudis are increasing­ly taking on such “low status” jobs in a new age of austerity when gas is no longer cheaper than water, with the government trimming oil-funded subsidies and tackling sluggish economic growth and high unemployme­nt.

“When I started this food truck two years ago many people said: ‘What? You will sell burgers and sandwiches in the street? You come from a big family and big tribe’,” said Bader al-Ajmi, the 38-year-old owner of One Way Burger.

“People were surprised,” he added, as a Porsche pulled up at the side of his truck to place an order.

Since Ajmi started his business, dipping into his personal savings, owning a food truck has become the trend du jour and attained a level of respectabi­lity. Working inside as a cook apparently still has not.

Still, many Saudis, long reliant on the welfare state for secure and undemandin­g white-collar jobs, are embracing manual labour jobs. For the first time, a new crop of nationals are working as tea sellers and car mechanics.

Posh Lexus-owners work as Uber drivers for spare cash. “Will Saudis ever work as street cleaners?” columnist Abdulhadi al-Saadi recently asked in the daily Saudi Gazette.

“Some people will look down at this proposal... They should know that nations only rise on the shoulders of their own people,” he wrote.

Last December, residents of eastern AlAhsa region feted a handful of young Saudis who swallowed their pride to do another job long deemed dishonoura­ble — working at a gas station.

The social stigma surroundin­g certain types of manual or service-based labour has been strong, but economic necessity is pushing many to take such jobs regardless of their social status. — GRAHAM GRIFFITHS, senior analyst, Control Risks

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