Saudi women to start own businesses without male permission

The New Arab

Posted Feb. 18, 2018

photo:  Business tycoon Richard Branson gives Saudi entrepreneurs advice in Riyadh last year [Getty]

Women in Saudi Arabia have been granted permission to open their own businesses without the consent of a husband or male relative, as the kingdom pushes to expand a fast-growing private sector.

The policy change, announced by the Saudi government on Thursday, also marks a major step away from the strict guardianship system that has ruled the country for decades.

“Women can now launch their own businesses and benefit from [governmental] e-services without having to prove consent from a guardian,” the ministry of commerce and investment said on its website.

Saudi authorities announced a further loosening of its stringent guardianship regulations that will see women entrepreneurs able to open their own businesses without a male guardian’s permission.

“No need for a guardian’s permission. Saudi women are free to start their own business freely,” ministry spokesperson Abdul Rahman Al-Hussein tweeted on Thursday, using a fast-growing Arabic hashtag that translates as #No_Need.

Under Saudi Arabia’s guardianship system, women are required to present proof of permission from a male “guardian” – normally the husband, father or brother – to do any government paperwork, travel or enrol in study.

Long dependent on crude oil production as its predominant economic revenue, Saudi Arabia is pushing to expand the country’s private sector, including an expansion of female employment under a reform plan for a post-oil era.

While women still face a host of restrictions in the ultra-conservative kingdom, Saudi Arabia’s public prosecutor’s office this month said it would begin recruiting women investigators for the first time.

The kingdom has also opened 140 positions for women at airports and border crossings, a historic first that the government said drew 107,000 female applicants.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the powerful heir to the Saudi throne, has been leading the drive to expand the role of women in the workforce in recent months.

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