Every year around International Women’s Day, companies across the Middle East publish glossy statements about gender equality. When the month ends, the numbers barely shift. That gap between rhetoric and reality is one of the most expensive inefficiencies in the region’s economy.
This is not a conversation about values. It is about competitive advantage. Middle Eastern economies are investing billions in digital transformation, yet much of their talent sits on the sidelines. According to a report by World Bank- 2024, women make up just 19 per cent of the MENA labour force, compared with 71 per cent for men and a global female participation rate of 47 per cent. In Iran, women comprise over 60 per cent of university students but only around 15 per cent of the working population, as per Human Rights Watch, 2017. The talent exists. The system does not absorb it.
This mismatch runs across the region. In many MENA countries, women graduate in significant numbers, often outnumbering men at university. Yet cultural expectations, legal restrictions and institutional inertia keep them out of the workforce. Even those who do work cluster in support functions, human resources, finance, marketing, while men dominate profit-and-loss roles. The International Labour Organiation describes a “leaky pipeline” where women vanish from career tracks as they progress, rarely leading the business units that shape technology investment (ILO, 2019).
The cost is measurable
The World Bank estimates that closing the gender employment gap could boost per capita income by around 50 per cent in a typical MENA economy (World Bank, 2025). Yet diversity is still treated as social responsibility rather than economic strategy.
Why automation changes the calculus
AI and intelligent automation are reshaping how work is organised, where it happens and which skills matter. Knowledge-based roles depend on cognitive skills and adaptability more than physical presence (UNIDO, 2023). This weakens several structural barriers: the requirement to be physically present in male-dominated workplaces, or to work rigid hours that clash with domestic responsibilities, becomes harder to justify when productivity can be achieved from a laptop at home.
Technology alone, however, does not dismantle discrimination. It merely provides tools. Whether organisations use those tools to design inclusive models or replicate old biases in digital form depends on who sits at the decision-making table.
The business case has been built over decades
A global ILO survey found that nearly three in four enterprises reporting improved performance attributed profit increases of 5–20 per cent to gender diversity. The same research emphasises that organisations need roughly 30 per cent women in leadership to capture those benefits (ILO, 2019).
Innovation is where the correlation becomes most striking. Boston Consulting Group research, covering more than 1,700 companies across eight countries, found that organisations with above-average management diversity derived 45 per cent of revenue from products launched in the previous three years, compared with 26 per cent for less diverse peers, with EBIT margins (Earnings Before Interest and Taxes) nine per centage points higher (Lorenzo et al., 2018). Crucially, companies investing most in digital technology showed the strongest link between diversity and innovation revenue. The more an organisation invests in automation, the greater the payoff from diverse perspectives (Lorenzo et al., 2018).
Women leaders: putting people at the centre of automation
Women leaders appear to humanise the automation agenda. A 2025 KPMG survey of Middle East women leaders found that 73 per cent believed AI would not fundamentally change headcount in the next three years but would require significant upskilling (KPMG, 2025). Rather than chasing efficiency at all costs, these leaders focus on equipping teams to adapt. The OECD reinforces this, noting that companies with gender-diverse boards record higher returns on equity, assets and sales, while firms where women hold at least 30 per cent of board seats cut carbon emissions by about 5 per cent more than male-dominated boards (OECD, 2024).
Middle Eastern examples of change
Deliberate policy shifts can yield rapid gains. Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 programme raised female labour force participation to over 36 per cent in 2024, through reforms that relaxed guardianship laws and opened new sectors (GASTAT, 2024). The UAE requires female representation in boardrooms and reports women as 46 per cent of its labour force , with 56 per cent of public university STEM graduates being women (UAE Ministry of Foreign Affair, n.d).
Yet progress remains uneven. Women across MENA still face limited access to safe transport and childcare, discriminatory legal frameworks and persistent social norms (World Bank, 2025). UNIDO reports an average of a 40 percentage-point gender gap in programming skills in some economies where data is available (UNIDO, 2023). Without targeted upskilling and supportive infrastructure, automation risks entrenching the very inequalities it could help dismantle.
What needs to happen
For automation to deliver on its promise, inclusive leadership must sit at the core of economic strategy. Governments should set targets for gender diversity at senior levels, evidence points to around 30 per cent women in leadership as the threshold for measurable gains (ILO, 2019). Organisations need to rotate women into profit-and-loss and technology roles, invest in mentorship and use shadow boards to bring in under-represented voices.
Digital upskilling must go hand in hand with removing structural barriers. Accessible training in AI, data science and cyber security is essential, alongside policies that address childcare, safe transport and flexible working. The OECD estimates that improving social infrastructure could lift women’s labour participation by about 3 per cent and add 2.5 per cent to global GDP per capita (OECD, 2024).
Finally, automation’s return on investment must be measured beyond efficiency. Success should encompass employee wellbeing, skill development and social impact. Automation should create better jobs, not simply eliminate existing ones, and algorithmic fairness must be part of the governance conversation.
International Women’s Day should be a moment of accountability, not merely celebration. The region’s economic ambitions are real and the talent is ready. The only remaining question is whether leaders will align the two, and stop leaving some of the most capable people in the room waiting outside.
