Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
MIGRATION
POLICY CENTRE
Demography, Migration, and the
Labour Market in Qatar
Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
GLMM - EN - No. 3/2017
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
EXPLANATORY NOTE
1
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Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
Demography, Migration, and Labour
Market in Qatar*
Françoise De Bel-Air
Abstract: In 2016, Qatar ranked irst worldwide in terms of per capita GDP. his is due to its huge hydrocarbon reserves and to the small size of its resident population (2.5 million in June 2017). Exploiting
the hydrocarbon resources and channelling them into ambitious development policies required massive
imports of foreign labour. he country’s total population has grown seven-fold since the mid-1980s;
moreover, foreign nationals made up an estimated 91 per cent of all residents (aged 15 and above) and up
to 95 per cent of all employed population in 2015. he awarding of the 2022 FIFA World Cup to Qatar
in December 2010 turned the spotlight on the country’s dilemma regarding the “number vs. rights tradeof ” issue: Qatar has one of the most constraining kafala systems in the region, which underwent only
minor changes in a reform enacted in December 2016. Paradoxically, demographic data also indicate that
a growing share of foreigners live with their families and give birth in the country. Among these may be
Syrian nationals who have come to the country since 2011. As of 2017, foreign population growth rates
have started decelerating, as past infrastructural projects achieved completion, new migration policies that
privilege skills over number are initiated, and political uncertainty looms.
Keywords: Qatar; Foreign Population; National Population; Nationals and Foreign Labour; Migration
Policy; Statistics; Labour Camp; Human Rights, Sponsorship; Family Reuniication; Second Generation.
I
n 2016, Qatar ranked irst worldwide in terms of per capita GDP, with $129,726 per resident.1 his
is due, irst, to its huge hydrocarbon resources: the country has the third largest natural gas reserves
worldwide as well as sizable oil reserves; it is also the top producer and exporter of liqueied natural
gas (LNG) in the world. Second, reaching such a level of individual wealth is made possible by the
modest size of the country’s total population: 2.5 million in June 2017.
* his is a fully revised version of the paper (updated till June 2017) that was published by the same
author with the same title as GLMM - EN - No. 8/2014.
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
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When the exploitation of Qatar’s oilields started in 1949, the country had hardly 16,000 inhabitants,
down from about 27,000 as recorded half a century earlier in 1908.2 he collapse of the traditional
economy based on pearl trade in the 1920s, and economic and political tensions with Bahrain in the
1930s had dispersed Qatar’s elusive and mobile population – local semi-nomad and nomad Bedouin
groups, ishermen, merchant families with slaves, and a few thousand Persian origin people, some of
them Shiites and the others Sunni Arabs (the hawla). Qatar’s ruling family and the British Protectorate
authorities who set up the oil sector resorted to importing workers from the Indian subcontinent and
from the Arab Middle East, due to the local manpower’s low level of literacy and industrial skills. In
1970, shortly before Qatar gained independence (in 1971), the irst census was conducted. It estimated
the total population at 111,113, of which 45,039 were Qataris and 66,094 foreigners. his was the
irst and last time that population estimates for nationals and non-nationals would be disclosed in the
country.
Indeed, the small size of the national population, even if it has been expanded to include some
naturalised families from Iran and the Arab Middle East, is considered a great challenge in Qatar. It can
be argued that the oil rent guaranteed each of the few Qatari citizens a high standard of living, protection
and security such as free health care, housing grants, subsidised utilities and education to university level.
Expenditure per student in education, for example, was one of the highest in the world in the 2010s3 and
Qatar stands high in the Human Development Index rankings (0.856, the top one in the Arab region,
ranking 33rd worldwide in 2015).4 However, fulilling the rulers’ ambitions to modernise the country’s
institutions and infrastructure to a world-class level, and more generally, investing the huge hydrocarbon
revenues, requires equally huge numbers of foreign manpower, too large to ever be fully replaced by the
small numbers of Qataris. herefore, in the view of many Qatari citizens, the high population imbalance
is not so much a blessing (many foreign workers cater for the needs of the few nationals) as a curse
(Qatari identity, constructed after independence, is under considerable strain).5
his dilemma has deepened since 2003. he increase in hydrocarbon prices spurred a hike in
production and attracted growing amounts of FDI into the country until the 2008 inancial crisis. Qatar’s
economic growth rate shot up to 15 per cent yearly during the period,6 as infrastructure investments
boomed, in real estate, tourism, and in education. Qatar Foundation’s Education City for example, hosts
branches of several prominent US universities.7 Yet, the tremendous rise in immigration rates since the
2000s is mostly due to the massive inlow of low-skilled, Asian construction workers. he awarding of
the 2022 FIFA World Cup to Qatar in December 2010 and the debates surrounding this event which
pointed to abuses of unskilled foreign labourers8 on the country’s building sites actually underlined
Qatar’s dilemma. Qatar has one of the most constraining kafala systems in the region and no category
of expatriates is exempted from Qatari sponsorship.9 And yet, a survey conducted in 2010 showed that
citizens felt sponsorship laws needed to be even stricter.10 he “number vs. rights trade-of ”11 is indeed
at work in Qatar, whereby the bigger the expatriate population, and especially “blue collars” among them,
the less rights they are likely to be granted.
Qatar was thus faced with two choices. he irst was to limit the numbers while increasing foreign
workers’ rights; the second was to sustain high levels of immigration while at the same time loosening
4
Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
the demographic imbalance between nationals and foreigners, through blurring the distinctions of status
and identity separating the two parties.
Until mid-May 2014, the irst option seemed to be the favoured policy target. In Qatar’s National
Vision 2030, the master plan for Qatar’s development planning launched in 2008, two of the ive main
challenges to address were: “Modernisation and the preservation of tradition” and “the size and quality
of the expatriate labour force and the selected path of development.” he Qatar Population Policy passed
in 2009 tackled both, irst, by promoting higher fertility rates among Qataris and second, through
advocating for “improving recruitment policies in line with a knowledge-based economy” (i.e., limit
the recruitment of unskilled labourers and substitute technology to number).12 his seemed in line with
oicial announcements made for several months, which promised substantial reforms to the country’s
labour and migration policies. It was expected that the sponsorship rule, which conditions exit from the
territory and change of employer to the sponsor’s consent, would undergo substantial revisions or even
be cancelled altogether. However, Law No. 21 of 2015, enacted in December 2016 and partly amended
by Law No. 1 of 2017,13 only brought minor changes to the rule (Zahra 2015).14 he kafala and the exit
permits were not abolished as was hoped.
To date, the new Population Policy 2017-2022 announced late 2016 by the Ministry of Development
Planning and Statistics (MDPS) and the Permanent Population Committee aim to strengthen previous
policy orientations: increasing the number of nationals, supporting orientation towards a knowledge
economy and controlling the recruitment of expatriate workers.15 he resident population was indeed
expected to start decreasing by mid-2017, due, irst, to the near-completion of major infrastructure
projects and second, to the layofs following an economic slump. Reduced revenues from oil and gas, in
a country highly dependent on these resources,16 resulted in budget cuts. hese had an impact on the
state’s population, which stood at 2,545,820 in June 2017, down from 2,700,539 one month before.
A number of layofs and staf reductions have taken place across the private and public sectors since
2015-2016: in companies and energy irms, as well as in public bodies (universities, research centers and
cultural institutions, hospitals, etc.),17 and more recently in the Qatar Foundation, a state-owned nonproit body.18 Regional political tensions, additionally, may have a further impact on migrants in Qatar.
Since three Gulf States and Egypt cut ties with Qatar and imposed a land, sea, and air blockade on June
5, 2017, many expatriates, including Egyptians, fear for their future in the country.19
INWARD MIGRATION
Stocks
In June 2017, Qatar’s total population stood at 2,545,820, up from an estimated 373,392 in 1986.20 he
country’s population thus grew sevenfold in a thirty-year span, at an average rate of 6.4 per cent yearly.21
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
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Figure 1: Evolution of Qatar’s population and growth rate (1986-2017)
3,000
20
16
14
2,000
12
10
1,500
8
1,000
6
Annual growth rate (%)
Total populaon (in thousands)
18
2,500
4
500
2
0
0
2016
2014
2012
2010
2008
2006
total
2004
2002
2000
males
1998
1996
1994
1992
1990
1988
1986
females
growth rate total populaon
Source: QSA (Statistical Yearbook, 2016 and monthly igures on total population, June 2017).
Growth rates rose after 2003 to peak at an amazing 17.3 per cent in 2008, before sinking as an
efect of the inancial crisis. Numbers picked up again in 2012-2015, due to the start of the massive rise
in workers’ recruitment to fuel the country’s infrastructure development projects, in line with the Qatar
2030 master plan and, especially, following the awarding of the 2022 Football World Cup bid to Qatar.
Between the two censuses of 2010 and 2015, the country’s total population increased by 35 per cent,
from 1,699,435 to 2,404,774. In particular, the stocks of males in the country, mostly foreign labourers,
resumed their spectacular increase already observed over the period 2003-2008. Since 2016, however,
the growth in Qatar’s population has been at a much slower pace, for the reasons stated earlier. First,
declining oil and gas revenues led to budget cuts and layofs; second, the near-completion of major
construction projects slowed down the inlows of new workers. he Ministry of Development Planning
and Statistics indeed forecasted that population numbers would peak at the beginning of 2017 and start
declining in the irst half of the year. 22
As mentioned previously, Qatari authorities only publish aggregate igures of the resident population
(Qataris and non-Qataris together), and conceal data for total national and non-national populations.
Figures disaggregated by nationality (Qataris/non-Qataris) are available for the population aged 15 and
above only.23 However, other sources allow indirect estimates of the unpublished numbers of Qataris
and / or non-Qataris below that age.24 In 2010, non-Qataris numbered 1,456,362 or 85.7 per cent of
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Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
the total resident population of 1,699,435, a signiicant increase from previous decades (Figure 2).25
Between 2004 and 2010, the Qatari population thus grew at a rate of 3.9 per cent annually, while nonQataris’ rate of growth reached 14.6 per cent on average over the period, a very high igure. During the
period 2010-2015, it can be estimated that the foreign population grew by 7.3 per cent annually on
average. Foreign residents reached an estimated number of 2,096,587, while Qataris numbered around
306,187 at the time of the last census in April 2015. Foreign residents thus made up 87.3 per cent of the
total population, up from 85.7 per cent ive years earlier.26
Figure 2: Qatar’s total population and estimates of the proportion of non-nationals
in census years (1970-2015)
Total populaon (in thousands)
3,000
2,500
2,000
1,500
87.3
1,000
85.7
500
75.9
59.5
73.3
71.7
0
1970
1986
1997
2004
2010
2015
year*
Qataris
Non-Qataris
* 1986; 1997; 2004: mid-year population estimate. GLMM calculations using QSDA/MDPS data.
Qatar’s foreign population is heavily distorted demographically. Men outnumber women by almost
1 to 5 (sex ratio for the population aged 15 and above reached 483 males for 100 women in early 2017)
and those in working age groups (15 to 64 years) made up 74.4 and 92.3 per cent of foreign women
and men, respectively, in 2015.27 On average, this population is relatively less educated (62 per cent
have below secondary level education) if compared to the Qatari nationals (33 per cent only at similar
education levels). Still, 16 per cent of non-nationals held a university degree (as compared to 33 per cent
of Qataris) in 2015.28
At irst sight, Qatar also displays an amazing pattern of spatial segregation of its expatriate
population: the share of those living in labour camps,29 presumably non-nationals, went markedly up
starting 2004 (Figure 3). In 2015, the clear majority of Qatar’s population (60 per cent or 1,442,882
persons) actually dwelt in this type of housing.30 his segregation is particularly acute for men: 74 per
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
7
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cent of them lived in labour camps that year. Between 2010 and 2015, the population of camps gained
443,288 more males. It also gained 81,444 females, a 6.7-fold increase from 2010. he share of women
living in camps reached 16.3 per cent of all resident females in 2015, perhaps a sign of the expansion
of the retail and services sectors, whereas most males are probably construction workers.31 As of 2010,
census results indicated that labour camps hosted a relatively young (average age: 34 years) and less
educated population than the non-nationals as a whole: 73.5 per cent had a primary school education
level or less while 5 per cent held a university degree. 32
Figure 3: Proportion of Qatar’s total population living in labour camps,
by sex (1997; 2004; 2010 and 2015)
80.0
70.0
% of total populaon
60.0
50.0
40.0
30.0
20.0
10.0
0.0
1997
2004
males
2010
females
2015
total
Source: 1997; 2004; 2010 and 2015 censuses, QSA/MDPS.
his emphasises the spectacular levels of economic growth experienced in Qatar over the 2000s
and 2010s, which gave an impetus to the import of foreign labourers. In the irst quarter of 2017, out of
a 2,108,881 strong labour force, 2,006,605 were non-nationals. Of those, 2,004,114 were employed, or
95.1 per cent of the total employed population, which is higher than in any other GCC state.33 Within
the foreign employed population, men outnumber women by 1 to 7.
Public wealth allows for a large public sector34 in the country, which employed 80 per cent of the
economically active Qataris in 2015. By contrast, 81 per cent of all economically active non-nationals were
involved in the private sector that year. Non-Qataris made up 99 per cent and 64 per cent, respectively,
of the private and public sectors’ manpower, due to their overwhelming share in the country’s total
workforce.35
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Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
Non-nationals, in efect, numerically dominate every occupation level (from 83 per cent of the
highly-skilled to 99 per cent of those in unskilled positions).36 Yet, the bulk of the foreign labourers (71
per cent, and 73 per cent of males alone) remained clustered in the lowest occupation categories. Among
Qataris, by contrast, 80 per cent were in “white collar” positions, from managers to clerks (92 per cent
of females and 73 per cent of males) as of 2015. Another 7 per cent held trade- and services-related
professions.37
As regards activity sectors, 51 per cent of Qataris (61 per cent of males and 34 per cent of females),
worked in “public administration and defence” in 2015; besides, many of the female citizens were employed
in education (28 per cent). For expatriates, the construction sector stood out by far as the main employer.
In 2006, 125,000 workers were recorded in that sector, a quarter of all employed foreign nationals. hree
years later, in 2009, recruitment in this activity had more than quadrupled and was peaking at 558,000
workers, or 47 per cent of the total foreign workforce. In 2015, the sector still employed 42.2 per cent
of all foreign labourers and, as shown in Figure 4, had reached another high, a six-fold increase in nine
years. his is probably a sign of the construction fever ahead of the 2022 World Cup. he number of
workers in domestic services and manufacturing doubled during the years 2006-2015. he numbers
of foreigners employed in education and in retail trade more than trebled, which conirms the recent
orientation of Qatar’s economy towards higher value-added and commercial activities.38
Figure 4: Foreign labourers by activity (Qatar, 2006-2015, selected activities)
900
Numberof workers in the sector (thousands)
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
2006 2007 2008 2009
Manufacturing
Wholesale and retail trade…
Domesc services
2010 2011 2012 2013
Year
Construcon
Educaon
2014
2015
Source: Labour Force Surveys, 2006 to 2015 and Population Census 2010.
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
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It is worth mentioning that female expatriates display a more contrasted employment pattern than
males. Most of them (46 per cent) were recorded in the domestic sector in 2015, but 31 per cent of them
were in “white collar” occupations, from clerks to managers (men: 16 per cent). Twenty-four per cent
were highly skilled (men: 13 per cent). Besides domestic services, indeed, as of 2015 women expatriates
were mostly employed in retail trade, as well as in education (11 per cent each).
Most recent estimates of expatriates by country of citizenship39 (Table 1) indicate that Asians,
and Indians among them, largely outnumber other expatriate communities in Qatar, like in the other
GCC states. As of 2015-2016, Indians were the largest group of foreign citizens in the country with
an estimated 650,000 residents, 25 per cent of the resident population as a whole,40 and around 31
per cent of the total estimated foreign population.41 he four largest national groups (India, Nepal,
Bangladesh and the Philippines), together constituted almost three quarters of all foreigners in Qatar.
he Egyptians are the largest Arab national group; yet, estimated at around 200,000, they made up
less than 10 per cent of all foreigners and 8.6 per cent of the total population. Syrians are estimated to
number around 54,000, which includes newly arrived Syrian refugees.42 he other Arab nationalities
(Sudanese, Lebanese, Jordanians, Tunisians, and Palestinians) make up between 20,000 and 50,000
persons. It is also interesting to note that nationals from African countries started migrating to the GCC
in increasing numbers, for employment in the domestic sector (female Ethiopians, as well as Ugandans
and Tanzanians, for instance), and in the construction and in the services sector (Kenyans, Ghaneans,
Eritreans). he growing turn to African countries to supplement Asian domestics or construction
labourers, for instance, points to the policies of workforce diversiication practiced in Qatar and in the
rest of the region, which aim to attract cheaper manpower and delect origin countries or human rights
defenders’ actions to enforce migrants’ rights.43
Table 1: Some estimates of foreign residents in Qatar by country of citizenship
(selected countries), c. 2015-2016
Country/region of cizenship
10
Esmates (total
populaon)
% of total
populaon
India
6,50,000
25.0
Nepal
3,50,000
13.5
Bangladesh
2,80,000
10.8
Philippines
2,60,000
10.0
Egypt
2,00,000
8.6
Sri Lanka
1,45,256
5.6
Pakistan
1,25,000
4.8
Syria
54,000
2.2
Sudan
50,000
2.1
Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
Table 1 continued
Sudan
50,000
2.1
Indonesia
43,000
1.8
Jordan
40,000
1.7
Iran
30,000
1.5
Lebanon
24,000
0.9
Ethiopia
22,000
0.9
Tunisia
20,000
0.8
Palesne
20,000
0.8
Kenya
14,000
0.5
Eritrea
10,000
0.4
% of total includes the Qatari population’s estimates.
Source: SNOJ, J. Population of Qatar by nationality - 2017 report, Priya DSouza Consultancy, February
2017. http://priyadsouza.com/population-of-qatar-by-nationality-in-2017/
Indians, Nepalese, Filipinos, and Bangladeshis alone made up about 78 per cent of the foreign
labourers, with 1,088,556 workers as of September 30, 2013 (Table 2).44 Indians made the bulk of all
expatriate labourers – 31.2 per cent of all employed non-nationals – with the Nepalese close behind.
Arab workers45 accounted for no more than 10 per cent of the total. Among them, Egyptians alone
accounted for a half but made up 5 per cent only of all foreign labourers.
Yet, does this national, occupational, and spatial clustering of most foreign residents in labour
camps mean that Qatar is only a place for temporary, labour-bound sojourn? In 2010, indeed, half of the
non-Qataris surveyed in the census had been residing in the country for only two years and less. Another
third had spent ive years and more in Qatar, and 8.4 per cent of non-nationals had been residents for
15 years and more.46 Moreover, the proportion of inactive (i.e., family dependents) among non-Qataris
decreased over the years: from 16 per cent of all foreign residents in 2004 down to 8 per cent in 2009,
at the peak of economic growth and recruitment in the construction sector. Since then, the share of
dependents among foreign residents has remained below 10 per cent of the total, hitting a low of 7.9 per
cent in 2015.
Nonetheless, the numbers of dependents have been rising steadily until today (2015, last available
data), and reached 159,874 persons that year (36,518 men and 123,356 women), aged 15 and above, up
from 68,285 inactive foreigners in 2006.
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
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Table 2: Estimates of non-nationals in Qatar by migration status and country/region of
citizenship (selected nationalities), 2013
*: estimates, author’s calculations.
Sources: Asian countries: Qatar National Human Rights Committee (NHRC) estimates as of September 30,
2013, published in Al-Raya newspaper, October 1, 2013 (http://gulfmigration.eu/estimates-of-non-nationalsby-country-of-citizenship-and-migration-status-selected-nationalities-qatar-26-30092013/).
Arab countries: Qatar Ministry of Labour data for August 2013, author’s calculations on the basis of the
percentage and total igures of Arab labour force and population obtained from Qatar’s Ministry of Labour by
Zahra Babar and published in: Zahra Babar, “Working for the Neighbours: Arab Migrants in Qatar,” in Arab
Migrant Communities in the GCC ed. By Zahra Babar (Doha: CIRS, Georgetown University and London:
Hurst and Co, 2017), pp. 19-38.
As it appears, the nationality or regional origin factor plays an essential role in deining the conditions
of stay in Qatar. As highlighted in Table 2, Nepalese and Bangladeshis are quasi-exclusively workers,
thus clustered to the lowest tier of the occupation and income ladder (and presumably housed mostly
in labour compounds). On the opposite end,47 half of resident Arab nationals are family dependents. In
Qatar, a minimum salary of QR10,000 and a certiied rent contract in the worker’s name condition the
possibility for a worker to sponsor his family members as dependents.48 he large share of dependents
among Arab residents, including Egyptians, thus suggest that most of them perform skilled and highlyskilled, well-paid activities. his was actually conirmed by Z. Babar in her processing of unpublished data
from Qatar’s Ministry of Labour: “Arabs comprise only 12 percent of the foreign Qatari labour force,
yet make up more than 20 percent of jobs in the educational sector, more than 95 percent of inance and
insurance jobs and over 89 percent of jobs in the professional, scientiic and technical ields.”49 Up to
92,220 Indian expatriates (17 per cent of this national group), are also classiied as dependents, which
means that this very large community has a diversity of skill levels and occupation proiles.
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Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
Moreover, the likelihood of some non-nationals in the highly-skilled and upper-income brackets
settling, at least for some time, with their family in Qatar is irst conirmed by the proportional increase
in female expatriates classiied as “house makers,” a category of the inactive foreign population. Indeed,
this can be taken as a proxy to assess the relative share of foreign households within all families (Qatari
and non-Qatari) residing in the country, hence roughly indicating the scale of family reuniication.50
For twenty years,51 indeed, foreign housewives accounted steadily for half of the total; yet their share
increased throughout the 2000s to inally reach 76 per cent of all housewives in 2015. Among these, most
were Arabs (58 per cent).52
he increase in the number of non-Qatari school students since 2003 also conirms this growing
trend towards family reuniication. As compared to Qatari pupils’ population, the “other nationalities”
(Asians as well as Westerners) gained in number and in relative share, while the Arab students also
increased in number but remained steady at 30 per cent of the total during the decade (Figure 5).53 It
is interesting to note that as early as 2003-2004, before the hike in recruitment of foreign labourers, all
foreign school students were already outnumbering Qatari students: the latter made up 48 per cent of
the total.54 In 2015-2016, Qataris’ share among school students had fallen to a third.55
Figure 5: Schoolchildren in Qatar by nationality group, in numbers and in
proportion of total (2003-2012, available years)
60.0
90,000
80,000
40.0
60,000
50,000
30.0
40,000
20.0
30,000
20,000
%
of all students (line)
number of students (bars)
50.0
70,000
10.0
10,000
-
2003/2004
Qataris
Arabs
2005/2006
2010/2011
Academic year
Other naonalies
Qataris
2011/2012
Arabs
-
Other naonalies
Source: Annual Statistical Abstracts, Ministry of Education/ Supreme Education Council (2003-2012).
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
13
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he evidence of family reunion, usually limited to foreigners in the upper-income bracket as we
have argued, thus conirms that Qatar did enact a policy of upgrading its workforce by attracting highlyskilled manpower, some of them Arab nationals, in line with the objectives deined for Qatar National
Vision. his developed in tandem with the massive hiring of low-skilled workers for turnkey construction
projects.
Flows
In Qatar, the Ministry of Interior’s data on residency permits are not made available to the public in
yearly statistical publications, and the Ministry of Labour and Social Afairs does not disclose records
of labour permits granted by occupation level. It is, therefore, impossible to assess precisely the socioeconomic characteristics of new entrants to Qatar.
he distribution of students in schools by nationality group pointed out the extent of the
“demographic imbalance” afecting the Qatari population, even in non-active age groups. he distribution
of births by nationality group of child56 highlights yet another facet of Qatar’s unique demographic
setup: two-thirds of newborns in the country are now foreign nationals. he numbers of Qatar-born
Arab and Asian babies, after nosediving during the 1990s in the aftermath of the First Gulf War, rose
steadily from the beginning of the 2000s alongside the growing stocks of foreign residents. As of 2015
(last year available),57 Qataris only made up 31 per cent of all newborns in the country (Figure 6).
Figure 6: Registered live births by nationality group of child (Qatar, 1981-2015)
10,000
60
9,000
50
8,000
7,000
5,000
30
4,000
20
3,000
2,000
10
1,000
0
Qataris
Non-GCC Arabs
Others
Source: Bulletin of Vital Statistics, QSA/ MDPS.
14
Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
2015
2013
2011
2009
2007
2005
2003
2001
1999
1997
1995
1993
1991
1989
1987
1985
1983
1981
0
GCC Arabs
Asians
% of Qatari births in total
of Qatari births
registered live births
40
6,000
Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
Figure 6 may also suggest another development in the population of Qatar, that of an inlow of
refugees from the Syrian conlict. Asian nationals’ births in Qatar have risen markedly since the early
2000s, yet, by comparison, the numbers of Arab births seem to have shot up since 2011. Qatar and the
other GCC states are not signatories to the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees and its
1967 Protocol and, thus, do not recognise “refugees” as a legal category. herefore, de facto refugees in
the region can only enter and reside in GCC countries under the conditions made to other expatriates,
i.e., as “guests” on short-duration visit visas, as temporary contract workers, or as a sponsored labourer’s
family dependent. Nonetheless, various sources in Qatar reported on the presence of Syrian nationals in
the country, some having to stay clandestinely. Representatives of the Syrian Embassy stated that, as of
mid-2014, Syrian nationals with residency numbered around 40,000, while another 20,000 were holding
short-term, visit documents.58 he igure of 54,000 Syrians in November 2015 (Table 1) is thus consistent
with a regular increase in the numbers of these nationals in legal situation in the country (hence, in a
position to declare their child’s birth in Qatar’s civil status), either having been granted iqamas instead
of their short-term visit documents, or having come from Syria using the usual immigration channels.
Meanwhile, the number of Syrian university students recorded by the Ministry of Higher Education
also witnessed an increase: from 171 in 2011, Syrian nationals studying in Qatar’s public universities and
colleges went up to 475 in 2015-2016, a near four-fold increase. he igures of university students from
other, non-GCC Arab countries, by comparison, only doubled over the same period.
his raises the more general question of whether or not Qatar is becoming a multicultural society.
As a matter of fact, foreign births include infants born to wealthy, highly-skilled expatriates inancially
able to sponsor their inactive family members, but also a share of children born to any legally-residing
couple.59 Births on Qatari territory or migration of infants thus should contribute to diversifying nonQatari resident population in terms of occupation level (workers of every skill level may still be living
with their spouse, if the latter came as a labourer, thus sponsored individually), and also ethnically, as
we have seen that most Asian women, in contrary to Arabs, are active. However, the absence of jus solis
(birth-right citizenship) in Gulf States, does not endow these children with any socio-economic, and let
alone, political, claim on the country.
Another factor questions the reality of a demographic diversiication of the Qatari population:
despite administrative obstacles,60 mixed marriages (i.e., between a Qatari and a foreign spouse) occurred
over the years, making up 7 to 13.5 per cent of all marriages between 2000 and 2015 (Figures 7 and 8).61
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
15
Françoise De Bel-Air
Figure 7: Marriages of Qatari men with foreign women (2000-2015)
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
0.0
5.0
10.0
15.0
of all marriages
GC C
Others Arabs
Asians
Others
Source: Marriage and Divorce statistics, QSA/MDPS, given years.
Figure 8: Marriages of Qatari women with foreign men (2000-2015)
2015
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
0.0
5.0
GCC
10.0
of all mariages
Others Arabs
Asians
15.0
Others
Source: Marriage and Divorce statistics, QSA/MDPS, given years.
16
Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
he shares of Qatari males and females marrying foreign nationals have been relatively similar;62
however, women most often choose citizens from other GCC states (up to 10 per cent of all female
unions in 2012). hese are sometimes blood relatives, stemming from transnational tribal groups settled
across the whole Gulf region. Moreover, women’s unions with non-nationals have been decreasing since
2011. It may have to do with the regional tensions following the Arab uprisings, which spurred dissent
between Qatar and its neighbours. It may be, also, that Qatari women changed their marriage patterns,
towards a more “nationalistic” approach.63 Male Qataris, by contrast, started turning to non-GCC Arabs
and even Asians, in modest, yet slightly growing proportions.64
Obtaining naturalisation in Qatar is a constraining process for non-nationals: it requires 25
years of continuous presence in the country. However, the foreign spouse of a Qatari male can obtain
citizenship after ive years of marriage; similarly, children of a Qatari mother, as well as individuals with
exceptional skills useful to the country, are all granted a priority status in qualifying for naturalisation.65
Rising numbers of highly-skilled residents with family members born on Qatari territory and of mixed
marriages, therefore, could lay the ground for future ethnic diversiication and demographic expansion
of the national Qatari population, yet, very slowly and selectively. Migration policies are promoting the
recruitment of more highly-skilled expatriates. he efect of these measures on Qatari society’s openness
to non-Gulf populations is yet to be seen.
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
17
Françoise De Bel-Air
Sources
Amnesty International. he Dark Side of Migration: Spotlight on Qatar’s Construction Sector Ahead of the
World Cup London: Amnesty International, 2013.
Babar, Zahra. “Working for the Neighbours: Arab Migrants in Qatar.” In Arab Migrant Communities
in the GCC edited by Zahra Babar. Doha: CIRS, Georgetown University; London: Hurst and
Co., 2017.
—. Free Mobility within the Gulf Cooperation Council. Doha: CIRS, Georgetown University, 2011.
Bertelsmann Stiftung, BTI 2012. Qatar Country Report. Gütersloh: Bertelsmann Stiftung, 2012.
Crystal, Jill. Oil and Politics in the Gulf. Rulers and Merchants in Kuwait and Qatar. Cambridge: CUP,
1990.
De Bel-Air, Françoise. “A Note on Syrian Refugees in the Gulf: Attempting to Assess Data and
Policies.” Explanatory Note No. 11/2015, Gulf Labour Market and Migration (GLMM)
programme of the Migration Policy Center (MPC) and the Gulf Research Center (GRC),
http://gulfmigration.eu.
Direction générale du Trésor. Qatar, http://www.tresor.economie.gouv.fr/Pays/qatar.
—. L’investissement direct étranger au Qatar en 2012, https://www.tresor.economie.gouv.fr/File/395138.
Gulf Labour Markets and Migration. Demographic and Economic module of the GLMM Database.
http://gulfmigration.eu/glmm-database/demographic-and-economic-module/.
IMF, Qatar, IMF Country Report No. 17/88, April 2017.
Malit, Froilan, and Ali Al-Youha. “Kenyan Migration to the Gulf Countries: Balancing Economic
Interests and Worker Protection.” Migration Information Source, May 18, 2016.
Nagy, Sharon. “Making Room for Migrants, Making Sense of Diference: Spatial and Ideological
Expressions of Social Diversity in Urban Qatar.” Urban Studies 43, 1 ( January 2006): 119-137.
Permanent Population Committee. Qatar Population Status 2012, hree Years after Launching the
Population Policy.Doha: PPP, October 2012.
Qatari and Gulf Press, partially through “Gulf in the Media: Gulf Labour Markets and Migration.”
Ruhs, Martin and Philip Martin. “Numbers vs. Rights: Trade-Ofs and Guest-Worker Programs.”
International Migration Review 42, 1 (Spring 2008): 249-265.
UNDP. Human Development Report 2016. New York: UNDP, 2016.
Winckler, Onn. “How Many Qatari Nationals are there?” Middle East Quarterly, Spring 2015, http://
www.meforum.org/meq/pdfs/5081.pdf.
Zahra, Maysa. “Qatar’s Legal Framework of Migration.” Explanatory Note No. 2/2016, GLMM, http://
gulfmigration.eu.
18
Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
Endnotes
1.
At Purchasing Power Parity (in international $), and $60,732 in current US$ (http://www.tresor.economie.
gouv.fr/Pays/qatar ).
2.
Jill Crystal, Oil and Politics in the Gulf. Rulers and Merchants in Kuwait and Qatar (Cambridge: CUP, 1990):
117.
3.
Bertelsmann Stiftung, BTI 2012, Qatar Country Report (Gütersloh: Bertelsmann Stiftung, 2012). he total
number of students being awarded overseas scholarships increased by 61.5 per cent during 2009 and 2010.
4.
UNDP, Human Development Report 2016 (New York: UNDP), 2016, tab. 1, p. 212.
5.
On internal diferentiation among the Qatari citizenry, see Sharon Nagy, “Making Room for Migrants,
Making Sense of Diference: Spatial and Ideological Expressions of Social Diversity in Urban Qatar,” Urban
Studies 43, 1 ( January 2006): 119-137.
6.
L’investissement direct étranger au Qatar en 2012, https://www.tresor.economie.gouv.fr/File/395138.
7.
https://www.qf.org.qa/content/qf-schools/academic-bridge-program.
8.
Amnesty International, he Dark Side of Migration: Spotlight on Qatar’s Construction Sector Ahead of the World
Cup (London: Amnesty International, 2013).
9.
In contrast to Bahrain, which (at least on paper) scrapped it altogether, or Saudi Arabia, where foreign
investors do not require Saudi sponsorship since 2000, for example. he UAE also reformed its rule of
conditioning sponsorship change to the obtaining of a non-objection certiicate from the worker’s sponsor.
10. http://gulfnews.com/news/gulf/qatar/qatari-citizens-want-sponsorship-rules-tightened-furthersurvey-1.742530.
11. Martin Ruhs and Philip Martin, “Numbers vs. Rights: Trade-Ofs and Guest-Worker Programs,” International
Migration Review 42, no. 1 (Spring 2008): 249-265.
12. Permanent Population Committee, Qatar Population Status 2012, hree Years after Launching the Population
Policy (Doha: PPP, Oct. 2012): 11-13, http://www.gsdp.gov.qa/portal/page/portal/ppc/PPC_home/ppc_
news/ppc_iles_upload/populations_status_2012_en.pdf.
13. http://gulfmigration.eu/qatar-law-no-1-2017-amending-provisions-law-no-21-2015-regulating-entryexit-expatriates-residence/.
14. In Maysa Zahra’s analysis, “[the new law] did little more than change the terms used for “sponsor” and
“sponsorship,” replacing them with “recruiter” and “responsibility,” respectively. Under this law, the employer
can still exercise control over the exit of the foreign employee from the country. he foreign employee may
submit a petition to the exit petitions committee to contest the decision of the employer or the competent
authority prohibiting him from exiting the country. he transfer of employment is still subject to the approval
of both the employer and the Ministry of Labour.” (See M. Zahra, “Qatar’s Legal Framework of Migration,”
Explanatory Note No. 2/2016, GLMM, http:// gulfmigration.eu.
15. https://thepeninsulaqatar.com/article/01/11/2016/Population-policy-goals-need-to-be-re-evaluatedMinister.
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
19
Françoise De Bel-Air
16. On average over the past two decades, oil and gas accounted for around 80 per cent of exports of goods and
services, and revenues from the hydrocarbon sector represented almost 90 per cent of total iscal revenue
(IMF, Qatar, IMF Country Report No. 17/88, April 2017).
17. http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-36023390.
18. http://gulfbusiness.com/qatar-foundation-cut-800-staf-report/.
19. https://www.pri.org/stories/2017-06-15/qatari-crisis-migrant-workers-caught-middle;
https://businesshumanrights.org/en/current-rift-in-qatar-puts-business-rights-of-migrant-workers-at-risk#c158928;
https://dailynewsegypt.com/2017/06/05/egyptian-residents-situation-qatar-remains-unclear-followingdiplomatic-turmoil/.
20. Mid-year population estimates, Qatar Statistics Authority (QSA), then the Ministry of Development
Planning and Statistics (MDPS), Annual Statistical Abstracts.
21. he validity of data is hard to assess, as all data emanate from the same source (MDPS) since 2015 and from
QSA before that date. he UN Statistics Division stated in 2008 that civil registration of births and deaths
in Qatar had reached a coverage rate of 97 per cent in the 1990s: https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q
=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=2&cad=rja&uact=8&ved=0CCUQFjAB&url=http%3A%2F%2Funstats.un.org
%2Funsd%2Fvitalstatkb%2FAttachment80.aspx&ei=6PymU5YdyaQ787yBsAY&usg=AFQjCNHOywW3
issTrFW9qYFnAMUfHXHJ9w.
However, other issues can be raised about the quality of population statistics in the country: population and
housing census 2004, for instance, was conducted on the total Qatari population, but only on a sample of the
non-Qatari resident population. Census 2010, however, covered the whole of the resident population. Census
2015 is said to have included “all individuals (nationals and foreigners) within the regional boundaries of the
State as of 20/04/2015, the census’ date of reference, “whether in households, labor sites, institutions, hotels,
ports or border crossings. Data [is] also collected on buildings, households, and establishments” (http://www.
mdps.gov.qa/en/statistics/census/Census2015/Pages/default.aspx).
22. https://dohanews.co/ministry-qatars-population-increased-by-40-percent-since-2010/.
23. In Labour Force Surveys, conducted quarterly since 2006, and based on censuses’ results.
24. See for instance O. Winckler, “How Many Qatari Nationals Are there?” Middle East Quarterly, Spring 2015,
http://www.meforum.org/meq/pdfs/5081.pdf. he author used vital statistics (Qatari births and infant and
child deaths) to estimate missing igures of the Qatari population aged below 10 years old, not published in
2010’s census, and estimated past trends of naturalisation. Another source is the Women and Men Statistical
Proiles, published every two years since 2004 by the MDPS. hese publications provide the percentage
distribution of population by broad age groups, including the 0-14 age group, by sex and nationality (Qatarinon-Qatari). See http://www.mdps.gov.qa/en/statistics1/pages/topicslisting.aspx?parent=Social&child=Gen
realSocialStatistics. As Labour Force Surveys (see previous endnote) publish data disaggregated by nationality
for those aged 15 and above, a simple calculation using the two sources, thus allows an estimate of total
populations by nationality. Finally, some data disaggregated by nationality and nationality groups are also
published by the Ministry of Education and MDPS on school students, which may be used to estimate the
size of the population aged below 15, yet more roughly than the previous source since the school enrolment
rate stands below 100 per cent in Qatar.
25. GLMM estimates based on QSA data. See http://gulfmigration.eu/population-by-nationality-qatari-nonqatari-census-1970-2010/.
20
Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
26. he method used to estimate the Qatari and non-Qatari populations for the period closest to census 2015
(held in April) is the following: 1. Woman and Man in the State of Qatar-A Statistical Proile (2016) gave
the percentage distribution of population by broad age groups for mid-2015, by sex and nationality. he
percentage of those aged below 15 is (x) and the percentage of those aged 15 and above is (y); 2. he Labour
Force Survey for the irst quarter of 2015 gave the numbers of Qataris and foreigners by sex, aged 15 and
above for March 2015 (z). he number of Qatari and non-Qatari males and females aged below 15 thus
equals (x)*(z)/(y). Total igures for Qataris and non-Qataris are then obtained by adding these results to
the numbers of Qataris and non-Qataris aged 15 and above, taken from the Labour Force Survey Q1 2015
(z). he total population igure obtained is 2,402,774 (306,187 Qataris + 2,096,587 non-Qataris), which is
very close to census 2015’s total population igure: 2,404,775. he diference comes from the rounded-up
percentages used for the calculation. Calculations for later periods, using percentage age group distribution
for 2015 and recently published Labour Force Surveys (Q1, 2017), retrieve numbers signiicantly higher than
the total igures published in monthly statistics. his indicates that the age balance has changed within the
two years, and that the percentage of residents aged below 15 has decreased.
27. Respectively, Labour Force Survey, Q1 2017 and MDPS. See Woman and Man in the State of Qatar-A
Statistical Proile, 2016.
28. Population aged 15 and above, Labour Force Survey 2015, http://gulfmigration.eu/qatar-population-aged15-nationality-qatari-non-qatari-sex-education-level-2015/.
29. Labour camp or labour gathering population is deined as follows by QSA: A group of persons of the same
gender usually staying in housing units. hey live as a group (collectively) but there is no relationship between
them and they do not form a living household. hey are two to six (small cluster) or seven or more persons
(big clusters) who usually belong to one organisation (company, establishment, etc.).
30. http://gulfmigration.eu/qatar-total-population-place-residence-household-labour-camps-etc-gendercensus-night-april-2015/.
31. Al Khor area, for example, where as many as 87.4 per cent of all residents are recorded living in labour camps
in 2010 (48 per cent in 1997) is home to many employees of the oil industry http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Al_Khor. In 2014, labour camp dwellers were also construction workers involved in the many building sites
related to the 2022 World Cup. As regards women, most of them were located in Doha in 2015. his suggests
that many female employees from the expanding retail and services sectors are housed in such dwellings.
32. http://gulfmigration.eu/qatar-large-and-small-labor-camp-population-15-years-and-above-by-10-yearsage-group-sex-and-educational-level-qatar-2010/.
33. http://gulfmigration.eu/percentage-of-nationals-and-non-nationals-in-employed-population-in-gcccountries-national-statistics-latest-year-or-period-available/.
34. Government department, government company, or corporation.
35. http://gulfmigration.eu/qatar-economically-active-population-aged-15-nationality-qatari-non-qatari-sexactivity-sector-2015/.
36. According to the ISCO 08 classiication, the three upper categories of occupations are “managers,”
“professionals” and “technicians and associate professionals” and the three lowest “craft and related trades
workers,” “plant and machine operators and assemblers,” and “elementary occupations”, respectively.
37. 2015 data (http://gulfmigration.eu/qatar-economically-active-population-aged-15-nationality-qatari-nonqatari-sex-occupation-2015/).
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
21
Françoise De Bel-Air
38. Labour Force Surveys, 2006 to 2015, and Census 2010. he igures of workers include domestic workers. 2015
data (latest available data as of May 2017): http://gulfmigration.eu/qatar-economically-active-populationaged-15-nationality-qatari-non-qatari-sex-activity-sector-2015/.
39. he nationality breakdown of Qatar’s population (Qataris/non-Qataris), and the breakdown of the foreign
population by country of citizenship is concealed by the MDPS, in charge of gathering and disseminating
statistical data on the country. However, since 2013-2014, Doha-based journalist and consultant Jure
Snoj has been collecting and compiling igures of foreign residents in Qatar from various sources, starting
with 55 nationalities. he irst publication of these data in BQ magazine (http://www.bq-magazine.com/
economy/2013/12/population-qatar-nationality) was consistent with a 2013 publication of governmental
igures on selected nationalities (English: http://www.arabianbusiness.com/qatar-s-population-exceeds2m-521314.html; Arabic: Al-Raya newspaper http://www.raya.com/news/locals, October 1, 2013, p. 20).
Latest release of data (2017 Report), under the umbrella of Priya D’Souza Consultancy irm displays igures
for 87 nationalities. he author states the origin of data as follows in the report: “he majority of igures shown
in the table below have been sourced from foreign embassies in Qatar. While they are mostly estimates, in
many cases the embassies have been clear the data was given to them by Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Afairs,
meaning that data was exact at the day of issuing the report. In several additional cases the Government of
Qatar has made data for speciic nationalities publicly available. hese occasions happened when a highranking oicial was interviewed by the media, as well as a few instances of the igures appearing on oicial
Qatari Governmental websites” (http://priyadsouza.com/population-of-qatar-by-nationality-in-2017/).
40. Including Qatari nationals.
41. Of 2,096,587, estimate of the foreign population in Qatar as of census 2015. hese ratios are only indicative,
since igures’ dates of reference difer by a few months, hence are subjected to change.
42. F. De Bel-Air, “A Note on Syrian Refugees in the Gulf: Attempting to Assess Data and Policies,” Explanatory
Note No. 11/2015, Gulf Labour Market and Migration (GLMM) programme of the Migration Policy
Center (MPC) and the Gulf Research Center (GRC), http://gulfmigration.eu.
43. See F. Malit and A. Al-Youha, “Kenyan Migration to the Gulf Countries: Balancing Economic Interests and
Worker Protection,” Migration Information Source, May 18, 2016.
44. Total foreign employed labourers: 1,394,405 (Labour Force Survey 2013, Q3).
45. Non-Qatari GCC nationals may not be accounted for in MoL’s igures, which are drawn from labour permit
data. In the GCC countries, the Uniied Economic Agreement between the Countries of the Gulf Cooperation
Council (chapter 2, art. 8), guarantees no distinction between nationals and other GCC countries’ citizens
as regards freedom of movement, work and residence, ownership, and exercise of economic activity in every
GCC state. See Zahra Babar, Free Mobility within the Gulf Cooperation Council (Doha: CIRS, Georgetown
University, 2011), 3. herefore, they may be working in Qatar without holding a permit. Female dependents
of sponsored expatriates, who are allowed to work while remaining under their spouse’s sponsorship, may also
escape registration and counting as stated by Babar (2017: 30, footnote 42).
46. http://gulfmigration.eu/percent-distribution-of-non-qatari-population-by-duration-of-stay-in-qatar-foreach-municipality-2010/. No data is available on the proile of residents in each category of length of stay.
47. Data for Western expatriates are not available.
22
Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
48. $2,747 (May 2017). Obtaining a rent contract and bills in their name is also diicult for most resident workers,
who often have to sub-rent their lat for the real estate prices are very high in Qatar. http://thepeninsulaqatar.
com/news/qatar/219493/getting-family-visas-tough-for-some-expats.
49. Babar, 2017: 35.
50. he indicator is imperfect, because a) some females may be also part of a household, while working in
Qatar (sponsored as an individual worker, by a Qatari national or establishment); b) No man is registered
as housemaker, although women can sponsor their partner, and c) it assumes that Qatari family formation
process has not changed signiicantly over the years (increase in age at marriage or in divorce rates, for
instance). However, this remains the only way to estimate the number of foreign households, which is not
published in Qatari statistics.
51. Between 1986 and 2004 censuses.
52. 50,550 family dependents were recorded as housewives in 2013 (Babar, 2017: 50, Table 2.1). However, Arabs
might be overrepresented among foreign households, due to their generally low activity rates.
53. Some MoE-SEC’s yearbooks in the decade did not display detailed information on students’ nationality
groups. he data stopped being disaggregated by nationality group of students after 2011-2012.
54. 67,893, as compared to 62,329 Qatari pupils enrolled (from Kindergarten to secondary level, all establishments).
55. 192,519, as compared to 96,115 Qatari pupils enrolled (from Kindergarten to secondary level, all
establishments). Education Statistics 2016, http://www.mdps.gov.qa/en/statistics1/pages/topicslisting.aspx?
parent=Social&child=Education.
56. Unsmoothed curve. Late registered births are not counted in the year of birth, but the year of declaration.
57. Quarterly data for 2016 are available as of June 2017 (http://www.mdps.gov.qa/en/statistics1/pages/
topicslisting.aspx?parent=Social&child=GenrealSocialStatistics). However, these quarterly igures may not
include the late registered births, declared in 2016, but which occurred earlier.
58. https://dohanews.co/syrians-qatar-continue-struggle-despite-help-government/.
59. Article 17 of Law No. 9 of 2004 which regulates expatriates’ entry, departure, residence, and sponsorship
matters, states that “A residence permit may be applied for within sixty days of the date of birth or the date of
entering the country in respect of a child born to an expatriate whose family has obtained residence permits.
If the child was born outside the country and one or both parents have a valid residence permit, the child shall
be permitted to enter the country within two (2) years of its birth.” Refer http://gulfmigration.eu/law-no-4of-2009-regulating-the-entry-exit-residence-and-sponsorship-of-expatriates-2/.
60. Law No. 21 of 1989 regulates the marriage of Qataris to foreigners. According to the law, a committee of
oicials from diferent government institutions, including the Ministry of Awqaf, examines applications for
such marriages (from male and female citizens) and gives its recommendation to the Ministry of Interior,
which has the inal decision. he law makes an exception for those wanting to marry someone from another
GCC country, their cousin, or the son/daughter of a Qatari mother. http://gulfmigration.eu/law-no-21-0f1989-regulating-marriage-to-foreigners-2/.
61. Source: Annual Bulletin of Vital Statistics (Marriages and Divorces), QSA/MDPS, given years.
62. his is worth noting, as anywhere else in the GCC, males marry away more than females.
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
23
Françoise De Bel-Air
63. he issue of men marrying foreigners is a matter of great debate in Gulf States, as women and social activists
link it to marriage delay and to growing levels of female celibacy, as well as to an array of social ills besides the
irst two, the other cannot be counted as social ills, right? (family instability, child delinquency, dilution of the
purity of descent, weakening of ethnic identity and Gulf social values, etc.).
64. his is due, in part, to rising bride prices in the Gulf, which has spurred the creation of many online marriage
agencies for Muslims. he development of international tourism and communications also opened new
matrimonial “markets,” for example, South-East Asia.
65. Law No. 38 of 2005 on the Acquisition of Qatari Nationality, http://gulfmigration.eu/qatar-law-no-38of-2005-on-the-acquisition-of-qatari-nationality/. Besides, O. Winckler in his reconstruction of the Qatari
population up to 2010, concluded on the evidence that a number of naturalisations occurred throughout the
Emirate’s history, including that of Qatari men’s foreign wives (Winckler 2015).
24
Gulf Labour Markets and Migration
Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar
About the Author
Françoise De Bel-Air (Ph.D.) is a researcher and consultant based in Paris, France.
A socio-demographer by training, she specialises in the political demography of
Arab countries, with an emphasis on the Middle Eastern and Gulf States. She has
been a research fellow and programme manager in the French Institute for the Near
East (IFPO) in Amman, Jordan. She is currently involved in several European and
international projects focusing on recent changes in family structures in the Arab
world, highly-skilled and female migration, as well as GCC countries’ demographic
dynamics and policies. She has published over thirty-ive book chapters, scientiic articles and research
papers, and an edited volume on Migration and Politics in the Middle East (2006). She is currently
working on a book on Jordan and the refugee issue. Contact:
[email protected]
Publication Reference : Citations and quotations should always include either the long or the short
reference provided here. Generally the long reference should be used but in exceptional cases (e.g., not
enough room), the short reference may be used.
Long Reference: Françoise De Bel-Air, “Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar,”
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017, Gulf Labour Market and Migration (GLMM) programme of the
Migration Policy Center (MPC) and the Gulf Research Center (GRC), http://gulfmigration.eu.
Short Reference: F. De Bel-Air, “Demography, Migration, and Labour Market in Qatar,”
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017, GLMM, http://gulfmigration.eu.
GLMM Mission : he Gulf Labour Markets and Migration programme is an international independent,
non-partisan, non-proit joint programme of a major Gulf think tank, the Gulf Research Center
(GRC - Jeddah, Geneva, Cambridge, Tokyo), and a globally renowned academic migration centre,
the Migration Policy Centre (MPC - Florence). he GLMM programme provides data, analyses, and
recommendations contributing to the improvement of understanding and management of Gulf labour
markets and migration, engaging with and respecting the viewpoints of all stakeholders.
GLMM Activities : he Gulf Labour Markets and Migration programme will have a wide range of
activities, including: Collecting and elaborating data and documents; Researching and analysing key
issues; Publishing various types of papers; Providing a daily news service; Training; and Organising
panels and workshops.
GLMM Publications : he Gulf Labour Markets and Migration programme produces an array of
publications addressing all major issues in diferent formats: Explanatory Notes, Research Reports,
Policy Briefs, and Volumes.
Downloading and Further Information : he paper can be downloaded from the Gulf Labour Markets
and Migration programme website: www.gulfmigration.eu. For further information:
[email protected]
Explanatory Note No. 3/2017
25
Françoise De Bel-Air
MIGRATION
POLICY CENTRE
26
Gulf Labour Markets and Migration