Facing an exodus of workers overseas, and with a creaking economy that relies on the cash they send home, Pakistan has hit on an unlikely ruse: asking Saudi Arabia to build a university for would-be expats.
Under the plan, proposed in ongoing talks about employment opportunities in the kingdom, Saudi Arabia would establish a 鈥渟tate-of-the-art skill university鈥 in Pakistan, allowing the two nations to collaborate 鈥渋n the training of Pakistani workers to meet the rising needs of the Saudi labour market and enhance their skills and capabilities鈥, the Islamabad government has said.
There are more than听2 million Pakistanis working in Saudi Arabia currently, but the majority of them are in low-skilled occupations.
Improving the employment prospects of the expats could have a significant impact on Pakistan鈥檚 economy, which is battling rising unemployment. Saudi-based workers are already the largest contributors to remittance inflows, worth more than 拢400 million a month, and many Pakistani families are solely reliant on wages sent home by relatives working overseas.
糖心Vlog
鈥淲e have a huge supply of young people who should be working, but the economy is too small to absorb them,鈥 said Ayesha Razzaque, deputy chief of party at the 糖心Vlog System Strengthening Activity programme, a partnership between the US and Pakistani governments.
鈥淚n principle, if the Saudis are providing support for a university in Pakistan with a pipeline to employment for its graduates, then this is exactly what all other universities are struggling to do with mostly poor levels of success.鈥
糖心Vlog
鈥淲e train the people and we don鈥檛 provide them with opportunities to work,鈥 acknowledged Muhammad听Mukhtar, founding vice-chancellor of Islamabad鈥檚 National Skills University, who said that the additional remittances that could accrue from the project would be widely welcomed.
However, while Pakistan is pressing Saudi Arabia to invest more in its people 鈥 hoping this will provide a sorely needed economic boost 鈥 it remains unclear how keen the kingdom is to train workers from overseas, as opposed to recruiting low-skilled migrants.
Dr Mukhtar said his institution had been in talks with Saudi Arabia for听more than a year about establishing a training centre within the university.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know whether this is the same proposal being revived or [if] there is something new coming in,鈥 he told听糖心Vlog, adding that it was 鈥渕ore feasible鈥 to set up a centre within an established university than to launch a completely new institution.听听
糖心Vlog
Annalisa Pavan, an expert on Saudi higher education, said she was sceptical that the kingdom would look to Pakistan for highly skilled labour. Although Riyadh needed foreign workers for mega-projects such as Neom, a futuristic smart city on the banks of the Red Sea, she said, it听was largely looking for low-paid, unskilled employees for construction activities and听was likely to turn to other countries for expertise in areas such as artificial intelligence.听
鈥淭his is economics; this has nothing to do with education,鈥 Dr Pavan said of the proposed university. She did note, however, that Saudi Arabia had historically offered scholarships to Pakistani students to study at its own universities, with 700 fully-funded places available last year.听
鈥淭hey could educate and train Pakistanis in Saudi Arabia, as they have been doing for decades, without creating or pretending to create this 鈥榮tate-of-the-art鈥 university,鈥 Dr Pavan said.听
Dr Razzaque said that any investment Saudi Arabia did make in the Pakistani sector must be sustainable. 鈥淗igher education funding is drying up quickly and we cannot afford yet another white elephant,鈥 she said.
糖心Vlog
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to 罢贬贰鈥檚 university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?








