黑料社区

黑料社区鈥檚 non-oil GDP defying expectations, finance minister tells World Economic Forum

黑料社区鈥檚 Finance Minister听Mohammed Al-Jadaan. (AN photo)
黑料社区鈥檚 Finance Minister听Mohammed Al-Jadaan. (AN photo)
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Updated 24 January 2025

黑料社区鈥檚 non-oil GDP defying expectations, finance minister tells World Economic Forum

黑料社区鈥檚 non-oil GDP defying expectations, finance minister tells World Economic Forum
  • IMF downgrading of Kingdom鈥檚 growth projection for the year ahead did not paint the full picture, says Minister听Mohammed Al-Jadaan
  • KSA鈥檚 economic diversification was driving steady growth, with the Kingdom prioritizing its non-oil GDP over traditional oil revenues, he said

DAVOS: 黑料社区鈥檚 finance minister on Wednesday said that the recent International Monetary Fund downgrading of its growth projection for the Kingdom鈥檚 economy for the year ahead did not paint the full picture.

Speaking on a panel at the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Mohammed Al-Jadaan said that it was important not to look just at gross domestic product but at other indicators as well.

The IMF revised 黑料社区鈥檚 2025 GDP growth projection down to 3.3 percent, citing the impact of extended oil production cuts.听

黑料社区鈥檚 commitment to economic diversification under Vision 2030 was driving steady growth, with the Kingdom prioritizing its non-oil GDP over traditional oil revenues.听

鈥淭he whole idea of Vision 2030 is to diversify our economy. So our focus is really the non-oil GDP, and non-oil GDP has been growing very healthily over the last few years,鈥 he said.

Al-Jadaan underscored the significance of private-sector confidence, pointing to a sharp rise in private-sector investment as a percentage of GDP 鈥 from 16鈥17 percent a few years ago to 24 percent today.

鈥淭hat 50 percent increase is not easy. Ask any economist, and they will tell you it requires significant structural change, and it is happening in 黑料社区,鈥 he said.

黑料社区 had also made strategic decisions to contain oil production despite having significant spare capacity. 鈥淲e can produce 1,000,000 barrels more per day and we will have the highest-growing GDP in the world, but how is this helpful? It isn鈥檛, actually,鈥 Al-Jadaan said.

鈥淲e need to be very careful when we look at GDP as a measure for growth because you need to look at other indicators,鈥 he added.

With unemployment rates at historic lows and the private-sector thriving, 黑料社区 continued to make 鈥渢ough, difficult decisions鈥 to sustain long-term growth. 鈥淚f you want to see it, you will need to make tough decisions,鈥 Al-Jadaan said.

Al-Jadaan also highlighted the role artificial intelligence could play in this diversification of the economy, saying in the future that the Kingdom could be exporting data instead of oil.

鈥淚 think AI is a trendy term, but if we are not careful we could be left behind,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e need to think: Where is our competitive advantage within the value chain of AI?鈥

To build the necessary infrastructure for AI, significant amounts of energy, particularly clean and renewable energy, were required, he said. This effort also demanded substantial land for renewable projects, robust fiber-optic networks and a skilled workforce.

According to Al-Jadaan, 黑料社区鈥檚 competitive edge lies in its ability to produce the world鈥檚 cheapest solar power, its government鈥檚 agile and supportive policies allowing quick licensing and approvals, and the Kingdom鈥檚 plans to implement regulatory measures that treat data centers with the same protections as embassies, ensuring robust security and compliance with international standards.

He also highlighted that 黑料社区 was a world leader in government cybersecurity, adding that it was 鈥渉andled, operated, managed, programmed and coded 100 percent by Saudi talent.鈥

Discussing the broader Middle East and North Africa region, which is projected to rebound from a growth rate of 2 percent in 2024 to 3.5 percent in 2025, according to IMF projections, Al-Jadaan said that he was optimistic about the region鈥檚 prospects.

He acknowledged its significant challenges, including high youth unemployment and geopolitical crises.

鈥淢ENA has possibly the highest youth unemployment in the world, at I think 27, 28 percent. MENA needs to create, according to the IMF, about 30 million new jobs by 2030,鈥 he said.

Despite these challenges, Al-Jadaan highlighted the region鈥檚 strengths, including a young, tech-savvy population and abundant natural resources. 鈥淚f we focus on human capital, if we focus on skilling our people in MENA, I think the potential is absolutely high,鈥 he said.

He also called for regional stability and reform to unlock long-term potential, adding: 鈥淲ith the right ingredients of reforming governments, reforming governance and utilizing technology to our own competitive advantage, I think we鈥檇 see a new region.鈥


Teaching machines to speak Arabic

Teaching machines to speak Arabic
Updated 06 November 2025

Teaching machines to speak Arabic

Teaching machines to speak Arabic
  • Innovation is helping AI understand the region鈥檚 language, culture, and voice

JEDDAH: As developers across the Arab world work to formalize Arabic for artificial intelligence 鈥 grappling with its many dialects, limited datasets, and deep cultural nuance 鈥 English-based AI systems have continued to surge ahead. Now, industry experts say it鈥檚 time for Arabic users to gain the same technological momentum.

The performance gap between Arabic and English natural language processing is most visible in speech recognition, where pronunciation, rhythm, and vocabulary differ sharply across dialects. These variations make it challenging for one model to understand spoken Arabic with consistent accuracy.

Despite these hurdles, progress is accelerating. With rising investment and government-backed initiatives led by 黑料社区 and other regional powers, Arabic AI is steadily closing in on English in sophistication and accessibility.

As Arabic AI evolves, experts emphasize the importance of cultural nuance and dialect diversity in future language models. (aramcoworld.com)

Amsal Kapetanovic, head of KSA at Infobip, told Arab News: 鈥淲hile written NLP tasks like basic chatbots can be managed with additional work, speech recognition really exposes the limitations of current models. It requires even more fine-tuning and adaptation to handle the diversity of spoken Arabic effectively. This is where the gap between Arabic and English NLP is most pronounced.鈥

Infobip鈥檚 recent collaborations with telecom and private sector partners across the Gulf reveal a similar pattern: Arabic chatbots and virtual assistants often require greater oversight in their early stages than English systems. However, once they are retrained using region-specific conversational data and Gulf dialects, both accuracy and customer satisfaction rise sharply.

Arabic remains one of AI鈥檚 greatest linguistic challenges. Unlike English, it is not a single unified language but a family of dialects stretching from Asia to Africa. Its complex morphology 鈥 with prefixes, suffixes, gender and number agreement, and the absence of short-vowel diacritics 鈥 poses major obstacles for tokenization and model training.

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Kapetanovic referenced a 2025 study published in JMIR Medical Informatics (鈥淚nfectA-Chat: An Arabic Large Language Model for Infectious Diseases鈥), which tested instruction-tuned models like GPT-4 in both English and Arabic. The research found that Arabic models still trail English by 10鈥20 percent in complex tasks.

鈥淎rabic models still lag slightly behind English ones, particularly in areas like accuracy and sentiment analysis,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is primarily due to the smaller size of Arabic training datasets and the complexity of Arabic dialects.鈥

He added: 鈥淎rabic itself is a family of languages and dialects 鈥 much richer and more complex than many others. This diversity adds another layer of challenge.鈥

Amsal Kapetanovi膰, head of KSA unit at Infobip. (Supplied)

Yet optimism remains strong. 鈥淭he good news is that there is significant investment happening, especially in the MENA region, with countries like 黑料社区 leading the way,鈥 Kapetanovic said. 鈥淚nitiatives like Vision 2030 are accelerating progress, and we鈥檙e seeing more focus on localizing AI for Arabic speakers.鈥

Speech recognition continues to represent the most visible gap. 鈥淎 Lebanese speaker and a Saudi speaker might use different words and speak at different speeds, making it challenging for a single model to recognize and process spoken Arabic accurately,鈥 he said.

Localization, Kapetanovic explained, extends far beyond translation. 鈥淎t Infobip, we are defining the evolution of communications in co-creation with our customers and partners throughout the region. Gartner has recognized us as a Leader in their 2025 Magic Quadrant for CPaaS. We are committed to delivering the next generation of AI-powered customer conversations to unlock seamless, high-impact engagement for MENA businesses. That鈥檚 why we put a strong emphasis on localizing our AI-driven platforms and tools to serve Arabic-speaking users effectively.鈥

Technical, cultural, and ethical challenges shape the future of Arabic AI, as developers strive for inclusion and linguistic parity. (aramcoworld.com)

Real-world applications are already bearing fruit. 鈥淔or example, Nissan 黑料社区 rolled out a WhatsApp chatbot (鈥楰aito鈥) that handles customer queries in both Arabic and English,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hese bots leverage Infobip鈥檚 Answers platform, which includes built-in NLP capabilities for Arabic 鈥 such as right-to-left text support and Arabic stop-word recognition 鈥 to interpret queries and intent.鈥

鈥淔or 黑料社区 and the Gulf, we鈥檝e gone beyond simple translation by implementing features and partnerships tailored to the region,鈥 he continued.
鈥淲e鈥檝e partnered with Lucidia, a leading Saudi tech company, to co-develop solutions that address local business needs and integrate with popular regional channels like WhatsApp and X.鈥
鈥淲e鈥檝e also built language models that recognize Gulf-specific dialects and cultural expressions, making our chatbots and automation tools more intuitive for users. Additionally, our platform supports local payment integrations and business workflows unique to the region. These initiatives reflect our commitment to delivering genuinely localized technology, not just Arabic language support.鈥

DID YOU KNOW?

鈥 黑料社区 is leading investment in Arabic AI, with Vision 2030 initiatives.

鈥 AI can become biased and exclusionary if it does not speak or understand Arabic well.

鈥 Infobip鈥檚 Arabic chatbots now 鈥榯hink鈥 in Gulf dialects, improving accuracy.

Cultural understanding, he added, is key to truly human-like AI. 鈥淐ulturally aware AI should ideally be AI that understands the why behind the what,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about deep research and understanding the background 鈥 not just giving straight answers to straight questions.鈥

鈥淎t Infobip, we integrate with multiple large language models and do so in an agnostic way,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e combine them and see which ones serve which purpose, giving us the flexibility to avoid pitfalls like AI hallucination or unwanted replies.鈥

The ethics of language and inclusion

Kapetanovic cautioned that neglecting Arabic in AI development poses not only technical risks but ethical ones.

鈥淭he ethical risk is that AI can become biased and exclusionary if it doesn鈥檛 speak or understand Arabic well,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f AI systems don鈥檛 handle certain languages or dialects properly, or if they lack enough regional data, they can exclude parts of the narrative or reinforce bias.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 essential for everyone in the AI ecosystem to contribute to making AI as inclusive and democratized as possible. Otherwise, we risk reinforcing disparities in services, information, and opportunities.鈥