Addressing Manpower Challenges for Saudi Arabia's 2030 Tourism Vision
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Date
2026
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
Saudi Arabia has embarked on an ambitious Vision 2030
strategic framework to steer the economy away from its heavy
reliance on oil revenues. A key pillar of this vision is to
aggressively develop the tourism sector as a major economic
driver and catalyst for diversification. The government
recognizes immense untapped potential in leveraging the
country's rich cultural heritage, natural landscapes, and religious
significance to position it as a premium global destination.
Towards this goal, Saudi Arabia has already kickstarted several
giga-projects like the $500 billion futuristic NEOM city, the
ultra-luxury Red Sea Project, and the wellness-focused Amaala
resort, among others (Alam et al., 2021).
The overarching vision targets increasing tourism's
contribution to the GDP from a mere 3% currently to an
impressive 10% by 2030 (Al-Mohmmad & Butler, 2021). This
paradigm shift is expected to catalyze millions of new
employment opportunities across the tourism value chain - from
hotels, airlines, and tour operations to culinary, leisure, and
heritage management roles. However, perhaps the biggest
challenge in realizing these lofty ambitions is developing an
adequately skilled and capable Saudi workforce for the rapidly
expanding tourism industry (Al-Mohmmad & Butler, 2021).
Historically, the sector has been heavily reliant on expatriate
labor, with limited interest from nationals who preferred careers
in the public sector or other industries deemed more prestigious.
Description
Keywords
Saudization of Hospitality
Citation
APA
