Home | MENA Health Market
Innovation, Infrastructure |
Change Needed | |
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Innovation in the healthcare sector is seen by some critics as too radical but previous experiences show that to make a real difference, incremental change to products, processes or services is essential. “Innovative thinking is nothing without a superior infrastructure and fortunately it seems that regional markets, Dubai, Oman and Jordan particularly, have recognized this. |
Like tourism, healthcare can be a catalyst of a growing economy; it is a critical subject for policy makers and a key to successful, sustainable economic growth. Recent figures estimate that overall healthcare expenditure in the Gulf could increase by more than 400 percent to reach $60 billion in the next 17 years. This is a sure sign that the healthcare sector is one for investors, and others, to back. Internalizing the medical innovation process within the Middle East means that the rewards gained will also be for the region - for investors, for inventors, for the workforce, the medical specialists, the patients, and the region’s economy.
| Medical Sector Healthcare accounts for less than 10 percent of total GNP in the region and is bound to increase to 25 percent within the next ten year, according to Groth. Peggy Farley, Managing Director of the General Partner said that globally, nearly 65 percent of all medical equipment components are outsourced at some level and there is increasing competition among medical firms in India and China, providing low cost alternatives.“However Arabia has the right ingredients to rival any region in quality medical manufacturing,business practices and forwardthinking environmental strategies,” she states.She said |
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| Increasing Demand | |
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Healthcare demand in general will rise 240 percent in the GCC region over the next 20 years, with health risk factors, ageing, population growth and medical inflation contributing to the rise in spending, according to Dr. Ioan Cleaton- Jones, a Senior Health Specialist in the Health and Education Department of the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group. In response to this spending increase, the total number of hospital beds is projected to rise from 68,250 in 2006 to 114,450 by 2015 and 161,750 by 2025. McKinsey & Co recently modeled disease trends in the six Gulf Cooperation Council countries and projected these figures. |
Numerous countries in the Middle East and North Africa region are exhibiting strong economic growth. While high-income examples such as the UAE, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia are wellknown, middle-income countries such as Oman, Jordan, Egypt, and Tunisia are also growing fast with annual economic growth of 5-7 percent. Cleaton-Jones added: “While high oil prices are a big reason for capital flows into the region, several countries are making far-reaching economic reforms to improve their business climates and attract investors, thereby driving more sustainable economic growth in the region.”
According to the World Bank’s ‘Doing Business’ report which tracks the economic reforms for 178 countries; last year, Egypt rose from the 152nd position to the 126th in the world, making it the world’s top reformer, while Saudi Arabia rose from 33 to 23, and Tunisia from 93 to 88. This is considered a milestone in helping increase intra-regional investment.
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