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Page 1: Competition: KSA

1 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Competitiveness as an Engine for Economic Growth: Implications for Saudi Arabia

Professor Michael E. PorterHarvard Business School

The Global Competitiveness Forum 2008January 21, 2008

This presentation draws on ideas from Professor Porter’s articles and books, in particular, The Competitive Advantage of Nations (The Free Press, 1990), “Building the Microeconomic Foundations of Competitiveness,” in The Global Competitiveness Report 2006 (World Economic Forum, 2006), “Clusters and the New Competitive Agenda for Companies and Governments” in On Competition (Harvard Business School Press, 1998), and ongoing research on clusters and competitiveness. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means - electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise - without the permission of Michael E. Porter. Further information on Professor Porter’s work and the Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness is available at www.isc.hbs.edu Version: January 18, 2008, 4pm

Page 2: Competition: KSA

2 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Saudi Arabia’s Competitive Position in 2008

• The dramatic increase in oil prices has created significant resources and rapid growth for the Saudi economy

• There is a new level of determination to leverage this opportunity to build a truly competitive economy and diversify beyond natural resources

• Saudi Arabia can succeed on this path, but only if it is willing to take a strategic approach, make multiple improvements in its business environment, truly open up competition and entrepreneurship in the private sector, and embark on a sustained effort to equip Saudi citizens with new skills, attitudes and mindsets

• It will be easy to become impatient and distracted by near term economic growth and the ability to support uncompetitive practices and policies

Page 3: Competition: KSA

3 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Saudi Arabia’s Long-Term Prosperity

GDP per Capita CAGR: -6.1%

Source: Groningen Growth and Development Centre and The Conference Board (2007), Swivel (2007)

GDP per Capita CAGR: +0.00%

GDP per Capita CAGR: +1.4%

Index Values, 1980 = 1.00

Page 4: Competition: KSA

4 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

$0

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0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 6% 7%

Prosperity Performance Selected Countries

PPP-adjusted GDP per Capita, 2006

Growth of Real GDP per Capita (PPP-adjusted), CAGR, 2001-2006Source: EIU (2007), authors calculations

IrelandUSA

Hungary

China (9.49%)

Vietnam

Poland

Taiwan

Greece

Pakistan

Portugal

Switzerland

Norway

Czech RepublicSlovakia

Germany Finland

IcelandSweden

Spain

UK

NetherlandsDenmark

France

Russia

SAUDI ARABIA

TurkeyThailand

Chile

Singapore

Croatia

Philippines

Qatar

Slovenia

Belgium

Canada

Italy

Australia

Japan

Korea

Mexico

New Zealand

Brazil

India

Oman

Indonesia

Argentina

Hong Kong

Israel

MalaysiaSouth Africa

Austria

Iraq (-6.2%)

Egypt

Iran

Yemen

Libya

TunisiaAlgeria

Kuwait

Bahrain

LebanonJordan

United Arab Emirates

Syria

Page 5: Competition: KSA

5 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

• Competitiveness is determined by the productivity with which a nation uses its human, capital, and natural resources.

– Productivity sets the standard of living (wages, returns on capital, returns on natural resources) that a country can sustain

– It is not what industries a nation competes in that matters for prosperity, but how it competes in those industries

– Productivity in a national economy arises from a combination of domestic and foreign firms

– The productivity of “local” or domestic industries is fundamental to competitiveness, not just that of export industries

What is Competitiveness?

• Nations compete in offering the most productive environment for business

• The public and private sectors play different but interrelated roles in creating a productive economy

Page 6: Competition: KSA

6 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Sources of Prosperity

Inherited ProsperityInherited Prosperity

• Prosperity is derived from selling or exploiting inherited natural resources

• Prosperity is constrained

• Government is the central actor in the economy as the owner and distributor of resource wealth – Resource revenues allow

unproductive policies and practices to persist

• Government’s role gravitates towards the distribution of wealth as interest groups seek a bigger share of the pie

• Prosperity is derived from selling or exploiting inherited natural resources

• Prosperity is constrained

• Government is the central actor in the economy as the owner and distributor of resource wealth– Resource revenues allow

unproductive policies and practices to persist

• Government’s role gravitates towards the distribution of wealth as interest groups seek a bigger share of the pie

Created ProsperityCreated Prosperity

• Prosperity is derived from creating valuable products and services

• Prosperity is unlimited

• Companies are the central actors in the economy

– Prosperity can only be created by firms

• Government’s role is to create the enabling conditions for productivity and foster private sector development

• Prosperity is derived from creating valuable products and services

• Prosperity is unlimited

• Companies are the central actors in the economy

– Prosperity can only be created by firms

• Government’s role is to create the enabling conditions for productivity and foster private sector development

Page 7: Competition: KSA

7 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

0

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-1.0% 0.0% 1.0% 2.0% 3.0% 4.0% 5.0%

Comparative Labor Productivity Selected Countries

Compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of real GDP per employee (PPP- adjusted), 2001-2006

GDP per employee (PPP adjusted US$),

2006

Source: EIU (2007), Saudi Arabia employee data (number persons employed) from ILO LABORSTA (2007)

USA

Czech RepublicPortugal

Italy

Sweden

NetherlandsFrance

Slovakia

Germany

Greece

Spain

New Zealand

Ireland

Australia

Austria

Hungary

Finland

Canada Denmark

Norway

Japan

UK

Turkey (6.4%)

Poland

Mexico TunisiaIran

QatarIsrael

SAUDI ARABIA

BrazilAlgeria

Hong KongTaiwan Singapore

India (5.3%)

China (9.0%)

South Africa

Slovenia

Malaysia

Egypt

PakistanPhilippines

IndonesiaVietnam

Thailand

Chile

Croatia

Belgium

Page 8: Competition: KSA

8 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Labor Force Mobilization Selected Countries

Employees as % of Population, 2006)

Note: Use most recent year available, either 2005 or 2006

Source: The Conference Board and Groningen Growth and Development Centre, Total Economy Database, November 2007

OECD average: 0.47

Middle East average: 0.40

Page 9: Competition: KSA

9 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Fixed Investment Rates Selected CountriesGross Fixed Investment

as % of GDP (2006)

Source: EIU, 2007.

CAGR Gross Fixed Investment (as % of GDP), 1990 - 2006

Turkey

Indonesia

US

Morocco

Saudi Arabia Bahrain

Lebanon YemenKuwait OmanEgypt

Pakistan

Algeria TunisiaSyria

Jordan

IndiaIranSouth Korea

China

LibyaPhilippines

Qatar

Nigeria

Singapore

Brazil

UAE

Page 10: Competition: KSA

10 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Saudi Arabia’s Exports Types of Goods and Services

Source: Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness – International Cluster Competitiveness Project; UN Comtrade; IMF BOP statistics.

Exports ($ Thousands)

Export TypeValue of Exports, 2006 Growth Rate of

Exports, CAGR 1998-2006

Natural Resources Related $201.2 Billion 24.0%

Non-Natural Resource Related $19.0 Billion 11.3%

Semi-Processed Natural Resources $36.4 Billion 20.3% CAGR

Processed Goods $11.7 Billion 16.9% CAGR

Services $7.3 Billion 5.6% CAGR

Page 11: Competition: KSA

11 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Inward Foreign Direct Investment Stock

Source: WIR, 2007.

Saudi Arabia

Other countriesU.A.E.

Bahrain

Qatar

Share of Middle East Inward FDI stock

Page 12: Competition: KSA

12 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Microeconomic Competitiveness

Quality of the Microeconomic

BusinessEnvironment

Sophisticationof Company

Operations andStrategy

State of Cluster Development

Determinants of Competitiveness

• A sound macroeconomic, political, legal, and social context create the potential for competitiveness, but is not sufficient

• Competitiveness ultimately depends on improving the microeconomic capability of the economy and the sophistication of local competition

Macroeconomic, Political, Legal, and Social Context

Page 13: Competition: KSA

13 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Macroeconomic, Political, Legal, and Social Context

• Saudi Arabia has registered sound macroeconomic policies, but transparency remains limited and inflationary pressures are rising

• There are ongoing debates about direction and speed of political reforms, which limits predictability and policy stability. Government processes remain complex and have limited transparency

• The Saudi legal system is in the process of modernization, but concerns remain about uncertainty in judicial decision making

• Social policies have addressed poverty and basic social needs, but challenges arise in education, gender relations, and the large expatriate community

Page 14: Competition: KSA

14 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Corruption Perception Index, 2007

Note: Ranks only countries available in both years (124 countries total) Source: Global Corruption Report, 2007

Change in Rank, Global Corruption Report, 2007 versus 2003

Rank in Global

Corruption Index, 2007

124

1ImprovingDeteriorating

High corruption

Low corruption

United Arab Emirates

Indonesia

India

Qatar

Turkey

ChinaBrazil

OmanBahrain

SAUDI ARABIA

Russia

JordanTunisia

Syria

Iraq

Nigeria

Algeria

Iran YemenPakistan

Libya

VenezuelaEcuador Angola

Belize

Trinidad & Tobago

Page 15: Competition: KSA

15 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Improving the Business Environment: The Diamond

Context for Firm

Strategy and Rivalry

Context for Firm

Strategy and Rivalry

Related and Supporting Industries

Related and Supporting Industries

Factor(Input)

Conditions

Factor(Input)

ConditionsDemand

Conditions Demand

Conditions

Access to high quality business inputs

– Natural endowments– Human resources– Capital availability– Physical infrastructure– Administrative infrastructure

(e.g. registration, permitting)– Information infrastructure

(e.g., transparency)– Scientific and technological

infrastructure

Availability of suppliers and supporting industriesPresence of clusters instead of isolated firms

Sophistication of local customers and needs

–Strict quality, safety, and environmental standards

• Successful economic development is a process of successive upgrading, in which the business environment improves to enable increasingly sophisticated ways of competing

Local rules and incentivesthat encourage investment and productivity

– e.g. salaries, incentives for capital investments, intellectual property protection

Vigorous local competition– Openness to foreign and local

competition

Page 16: Competition: KSA

16 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Ease of Doing Business Saudi Arabia

Ranking, 2007 (of 178 countries)

Source: World Bank Doing Business (2008)

Favorable Unfavorable

Median Ranking, Middle East

Saudi Arabia per capita GDP rank: 48

Saudi Arabia 2010 goal: 10

Saudi Arabia Doing Business rank: 23

Page 17: Competition: KSA

17 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Quality of electricity supply 40

Quality of port infrastructure 42

Air transport infrastructure quality 43

Reliability of police services 45

Competitive Disadvantages Relative to GDP per Capita

Competitive Advantages Relative to GDP per Capita

Stringency of environmental regulations 101Business costs of corruption 89Buyer sophistication 81Quality of management schools 73Quality of private property rights 72Absence of trade barriers 69Decentralization of economic policymaking 69Local equity market access 65Quality of math and science education 65Local availability of specialized research 65 and training servicesQuality of primary education 64Financial market sophistication 63Availability of scientists and engineers 57Effectiveness of antitrust policy 57Intensity of local competition 53Quality of scientific research institutions 51

Saudi Arabian Business Environment Selected Advantages and Disadvantages, 2007

Note: Rank versus 127 countries; overall, Saudi Arabia ranks 48th in 2006 PPP adjusted GDP per capita and 51h in Business Competitiveness. Only 2007 data available. Source: Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness, Harvard University (2007)

Page 18: Competition: KSA

18 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

SAUDI ARABIA

0

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35,000

40,000

45,000 United States

Switzerland

Italy

DenmarkIreland

India

Business Competitiveness Index

2006 GDP per Capita (PPP- adjusted)

Malaysia

Source: Global Competitiveness Report 2007

SwedenKuwait Finland

Germany

Qatar

Norway

HighLow

Greece

Argentina

SpainBahrain

Libya

IndonesiaKenya

Tunisia

Korea

Colombia

Variation in BCI score explains 82% of

variation in GDP per capita

Ranking Microeconomic Competitiveness Business Competitiveness Index, 2007

IcelandHong Kong

New Zealand

Estonia

Japan

Chile

ThailandCosta Rica

Jordan

Russia

Venezuela

Hungary

Cyprus

SloveniaPortugal

Israel

TaiwanFrance

Australia

LatviaPoland

Slovakia

Czech Republic

South Africa

China

Brazil

TanzaniaNigeriaPakistan Philippines

Peru

Ukraine

Canada

Saudi Arabia’s Ranking

Global Competitiveness

Index

Business Competitiveness

Index

35 51

Lithuania

Page 19: Competition: KSA

19 Copyright 2007 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Sources: HBS student team research (2003) - Peter Tynan, Chai McConnell, Alexandra West, Jean Hayden

HotelsHotels

Attractions andActivities

e.g., theme parks, casinos, sports

Attractions andActivities

e.g., theme parks, casinos, sports

Airlines, Cruise Ships

Airlines, Cruise Ships

Travel agentsTravel agents Tour operatorsTour operators

RestaurantsRestaurants

Property Services Property Services

Maintenance Services

Maintenance Services

Government agenciese.g. Australian Tourism Commission,

Great Barrier Reef Authority

Government agenciese.g. Australian Tourism Commission,

Great Barrier Reef Authority

Educational Institutionse.g. James Cook University,

Cairns College of TAFE

Educational Institutionse.g. James Cook University,

Cairns College of TAFE

Industry Groupse.g. Queensland Tourism

Industry Council

Industry Groupse.g. Queensland Tourism

Industry Council

Food Suppliers

Food Suppliers

Public Relations & Market Research

Services

Public Relations & Market Research

Services

Local retail, health care, and other services

Local retail, health care, and other services

Souvenirs, Duty Free

Souvenirs, Duty Free

Banks,Foreign

Exchange

Banks,Foreign

Exchange

Local Transportation

Local Transportation

Enhancing Cluster Development Tourism Cluster in Cairns, Australia

Page 20: Competition: KSA

20 Copyright 2007 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Equipment Suppliers

(e.g. Oil Field Chemicals,Drilling Rigs, Drill Tools)

SpecializedTechnology

Services

(e.g. Drilling Consultants,

Reservoir Services, Laboratory Analysis)

Subcontractors

(e.g. Surveying,Mud Logging,Maintenance

Services)

BusinessServices

(e.g. MIS Services,Technology Licenses,

Risk Management)

Specialized Institutions (e.g. Academic Institutions, Training Centers, Industry Associations)

The Houston Oil and Gas Cluster

Oil & Natural Gas Completion &

Production

Oil & Natural Gas Exploration & Development

Oil Trans-

portationOil

TradingOil

Refining

Oil Retail

Marketing

Oil WholesaleMarketing

Oil Distribution

Gas Gathering

Gas Processing

Gas Trading

Gas Transmis-

sion

Gas Distribution

Gas Marketing

Upstream Downstream

Oilfield Services/Engineering & Contracting Firms

Page 21: Competition: KSA

21 Copyright 2007 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

National Cluster Export Portfolio Saudi Arabia, 1997-2005

Change in Saudi Arabia’s world export market share, 1997 – 2005Source: Prof. Michael E. Porter, International Cluster Competitiveness Project, Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness, Harvard Business School; Richard Bryden, Project Director. Underlying data drawn from the UN Commodity Trade Statistics Database and the IMF BOP statistics.

Saud

i Ara

bia’

s w

orld

exp

ort m

arke

t sha

re, 2

005

Change In Saudi Arabia’s Overall World Export Share: +1.09%

Saudi Arabia’s Average World Export Share: 1.92%

Exports of US$1.2 Billion =

Processed Foods

Business Services

Chemical ProductsOil and Gas

(5.49%, 14.99%)$162 billions

Plastics

Prefabricated Enclosures and Structures

2%

1.5%

1%

0.5% Construction Materials

0%

Agricultural ProductsMetal Mining and Manufacturing

Motor Driven Products Communications Equipment

Building Fixtures and Equipment

Jewelry, Precious Metals and CollectiblesTextiles

Leather and Related Products

Automotive / Medical Devices Biopharmaceuticals

Page 22: Competition: KSA

22 Copyright 2007 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Improving Company Sophistication Relative Position of Saudi Arabian Companies, 2007

Extent of staff training 77Reliance on professional management 71Degree of customer orientation 69Extent of marketing 68Prevalence of foreign technology 62 licensingExtent of regional sales 61Extent of incentive compensation 56Breadth of international markets 52Capacity for innovation 49Nature of competitive advantage 49Willingness to delegate authority 47

Competitive Disadvantages Relative to GDP per Capita

Competitive Advantages Relative to GDP per Capita

Note: Rank versus 127 countries; overall, Saudi Arabia ranks 48th in 2006 PPP adjusted GDP per capita and 51h in Business Competitiveness. Only 2007 data available. Source: Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness, Harvard University (2007)

Control of international distribution 19Production process sophistication 32Value chain breadth 34

Page 23: Competition: KSA

23 Copyright 2007 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Geographic Influences on Competitiveness

Broad Economic AreasBroad Economic Areas

Groups of Neighboring Nations

Groups of Neighboring Nations

States, ProvincesStates, Provinces

Metropolitan AreasMetropolitan Areas

NationNation

World EconomyWorld Economy

Rural AreasRural Areas

The Neighborhood

Regional Economies

Page 24: Competition: KSA

24 Copyright 2007 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Saudi Arabia’s Provinces

Source: Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority (SAMA) report, 2007

% Social Security recipients below/above national average% Labor force participation above/below national average

Page 25: Competition: KSA

25 Copyright 2007 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

The Neighborhood Middle East

• Economic coordination among neighboring countries can significantly enhance competitiveness• Integration with neighbors offers greater opportunities than participation in broader economic forums

Page 26: Competition: KSA

26 Copyright 2007 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

The Process of Economic Development Shifting Roles and Responsibilities

Old ModelOld Model

• Government drives economic development through policy decisions and incentives

• Government drives economic development through policy decisions and incentives

New ModelNew Model

• Economic development is a collaborative process involving government at multiple levels, companies, teaching and research institutions, and private sector organizations

• Economic development is a collaborative process involving government at multiple levels, companies, teaching and research institutions, and private sector organizations

• Competitiveness must become a bottoms-up process in which many individuals, companies, and institutions take responsibility

• Every community and cluster can take steps to enhance competitiveness

• The private sector must become more engaged in competitiveness to improve rapidly

Page 27: Competition: KSA

27 Copyright 2007 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Towards a Competitiveness Agenda for Saudi Arabia

• Create a culture of productivity in Saudi Arabia• Continue improving political and legal stability and transparency • Pursue a sustained program to upgrade the Saudi business

environment, sequencing priorities based on binding constraints• Upgrade company sophistication and foster entrepreneurship and

the development of SMEs• Pursue a comprehensive policy for cluster development• Expand information, openness, and transparency throughout the

economy• Develop and implement distinct strategies for each Saudi Arabian

province• Achieve regional economic coordination and integration with Arab

neighbors

• Achieving competitiveness will require a sustained effort over a decade or more

Page 28: Competition: KSA

28 Copyright 2007 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Address the Weaknesses and Binding Constraints in the Business Environment

• Business regulation

• Financial markets

• Stringency of quality, safety and environmental standards

• Openness of competition

• Market information

• Education and skills development

• Innovative capacity

Page 29: Competition: KSA

29 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Upgrade Company Sophistication and Foster Entrepreneurship

• Create a national campaign to foster entrepreneurship and support SME development

• Expand corporate disclosure

• Strengthen corporate governance

• Introduce best practices in terms of operational efficiency – Utilization of information technology– Quality improvement and certification– A culture of learning and innovation

• Upgrade human resources

• Create more focused Saudi business groups

• Improve private sector institutions and expand the role of the private sector in economic development

Page 30: Competition: KSA

30 Copyright 2007 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Create a Comprehensive Policy for Cluster Development

• The Industrial Development Strategy has an explicit focus on cluster development

• Current cluster development policy should extend to the entire economy, including domestic industries and all the provinces

• Realign government economic development policies around clusters

Page 31: Competition: KSA

31 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Clusters and Economic Policy

ClustersClusters

Specialized Physical Infrastructure

Natural Resource Protection

Environmental Stewardship

Science and Technology Investments (e.g., centers, university departments, technology transfer)

Education and Workforce TrainingBusiness Attraction

Export Promotion

• Clusters provide a framework for organizing the implementation of public policy and public investments towards economic development

Standard settingMarket Information and Disclosure

Page 32: Competition: KSA

32 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Create a Comprehensive Policy for Cluster Development

• The Industrial Development Strategy has an explicit focus on cluster development, a major strength

• Cluster development policy should extend to the entire economy, including domestic industries and all the provinces

• Realign government economic development policies around clusters

• The Economic Cities program should be directly tied to the cluster development program

• Science-based clusters will be slow to develop. The focus should be on making existing and emerging Saudi clusters more knowledge intensive

Page 33: Competition: KSA

33 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Grow exports inrelated clusters

Leverage unique Saudi Arabian strengths andniche positions

Diversifying the Saudi Arabian Economy

Leverage the largedomestic market

Widen participation in existing clusters

Upgrade existing export products

Page 34: Competition: KSA

34 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Source: International Cluster Competitiveness Project, Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness, Harvard Business School

Pesticide and Other Agricultural Chemicals

Organic Chemicals

Chemically Based Ingredients

Strong Export Share

Weak Export Share

Losing Market Share Gaining Market Share

Misc. Crude Materials

Dyeing, Tanning and Coloring MaterialsMiscellaneous Mineral Products

Growth Opportunities within Clusters Saudi Arabian Chemical Cluster

Inorganic Chemicals Packaged Chemicals

Synthetic Fibers

Explosives

Page 35: Competition: KSA

35 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Grow Current Niche Positions Leading Saudi Arabian Export Industries outside of Clusters, 2005

Industry (Processed Products) Cluster Market Share

Change in Market Share

Export Volume

Carpets and other textile floor coverings, woven Textiles 5.6% 3.7% 142,479

Sheep, lamb skin leather Leather and Related Products 3.9% 2.6% 42,787

Other forms of unvulcanized rubber Construction Materials 3.0% 2.9% 15,971

Drawn, blown glass in sheets Building Fixtures and Equipment 2.4% 1.6% 7,020

Asbestos-cement and fiber-cement materials Construction Materials 1.9% 0.2% 47,977

Cast, rolled glass in sheets Building Fixtures and Equipment 1.8% -6.3% 14,633 Portland cement, aluminous cement and similar products Construction Materials 1.7% -0.4% 129,918

Bridges and bridge-sections Prefabricated Enclosures and Structures 1.6% -4.0% 8,387

Towers and lattice masts Prefabricated Enclosures and Structures 1.6% -0.9% 19,143

Miscellaneous articles of pulp, paper and paperboard Forest Products 1.5% 0.4% 218,347

Other metal structures and parts Prefabricated Enclosures and Structures 1.4% 1.0% 266,167

Rubber, textile yarn, cord Textiles 1.3% 1.3% 3,841

Jute, other textile bast fibers Textiles 1.2% 1.2% 105

Preparations for hair Biopharmaceuticals 1.1% 0.3% 86,847

Goat or kid skin leather Leather and Related Products 1.1% 0.8% 6,561

Silk Textiles 1.1% 3,444

Sands, natural not metal bearing Construction Materials 1.0% 0.8% 10,976

Paper and paperboard, corrugated, creped, crinkled Forest Products 1.0% 0.7% 34,473

Gold, non-monetary, excluding ores Jewelry, Precious Metals and Collectibles 0.9% 0.9% 478,006

Prefabricated buildings Prefabricated Enclosures and Structures 0.9% -1.0% 53,163

Page 36: Competition: KSA

36 Copyright 2007 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

FurnitureBuilding Fixtures,

Equipment & Services

Fishing & Fishing Products Hospitality

& TourismAgricultural

ProductsTransportation

& Logistics

Growth Through Related Clusters

Plastics

Oil & Gas

Chemicl Products

Biopharma-ceuticals

Power Generation

Aerospace Vehicles &

Defense

Lightning & ElectricalEquipment

Financial Services

Publishing & Printing

Entertainment

Information Tech.

Communi-cations

Equipment

Aerospace Engines

Business Services

Distribution Services

Forest Products

Heavy Construction

Services

Construction Materials

Prefabricated Enclosures

Heavy Machinery

Sporting & Recreation

Goods

Automotive

Production Technology

Motor Driven Products

Metal Manufacturing

Apparel

Leather & Related Products

Jewelry & Precious Metals

Textiles

Footwear

Processed Food

Tobacco

Medical Devices

Analytical InstrumentsEducation &

Knowledge Creation

Note: Clusters with overlapping borders or identical shading have at least 20% overlap(by number of industries) in both directions.

Page 37: Competition: KSA

37 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Develop Distinctive Strategies in each Saudi Arabia Province

• Regional development should follow a hub and spoke model to link rural areas to the nearest urban center

• Improving social service delivery and physical infrastructure across all provinces are important preconditions for regional economic development

• Each region needs a distinctive economic plan that reflects its location, assets, and existing economic activity

• Economic policy formulation and implementation should be gradually decentralized

• Government capability in each province needs to be upgrading over time

Page 38: Competition: KSA

38 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Enhancing the Economic Cities Concept

Makkah

Riyadh Eastern Province

Ha'il

Asir

Tabuk

Madinah

Najran

Al Jowf

Qassim

Northern Borders

Jizan

Al- Baha

Eastern Province Economic City

Jizan Economic City

King Abdullah Economic City

Knowledge Economic City

Prince Abdulaziz bin Musaid Economic City

Tabuk Economic City

Note: Exact physical location of Economic Cities still to be determined

• The economic cities can become an important tool for Saudi Arabian development

• However, they also symbolize the challenges that the country needs to address

• They have been planned centrally, not by the regions themselves

• They focus on infrastructure rather than skills and institutions

• Economic cities have an unclear relation to clusters and the surrounding regional economy

• They ask for private sector action but have been designed by the government

Proposed Locations for Economic Cities

Page 39: Competition: KSA

39 Copyright 2008 © Professor Michael E. PorterCompetitiveness Master = 2007-11-14.ppt

Develop a Regional Competitiveness Strategy with Arab Neighbors

• The Gulf Cooperation Council can be an important complement to competitiveness efforts at the national level

• Many aspects of the business environment can be enhanced by coordination and integration with neighboring countries

• The region needs to shift from rhetoric to action

• Due to its size and resources, Saudi Arabia should take a leadership role

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National Value Proposition

Defining an Economic Strategy for Saudi Arabia

• What is the unique competitive position of Saudi Arabia given its location, legacy, existing strengths, and potential strengths?

– What roles in the world, the broad economic area, and the neighborhood?

– What unique value as a business location?– For what range and types of businesses, activities

in the value chain, and clusters can Saudi Arabia be competitive?

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Towards a Strategic Positioning for Saudi Arabia

Strengths to Build Upon

• Natural resource endowments• Largest and most populous economy in the Middle East• Location between Europe, Asia, and Africa• Distinct cultural traditions• Significant accumulated capital

• Saudi Arabia has outlined an ambitious action agenda to enhance competitiveness

• It will be important to set priorities and sequence steps to reflect the realities of Saudi Arabia’s economy

• Fundamental changes in the capabilities and attitudes of many Saudi citizens will be needed to achieve the desired transformation of the Saudi Arabian economy