Workshop 4 / GRM 2026
Overlapping Ambitions: State-Led Economic Diversification and Mounting Intra-GCC Competition

Abstract

The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) governments are attempting to accelerate their countries’ economic diversification through ambitious, nationally minded visions and strategies. These state-led initiatives demonstrate a shared desire to transition away from hydrocarbon reliance. They also exhibit significant similarities. While economic diversification has the potential to foster cooperation among the historically hydrocarbon-heavy GCC economies, similarities in the member states’ national visions indicate increased intra-bloc competition. The GCC economies are increasingly vying for the same investors, visitors, and global prominence across several sectors.This workshop will explore the implications of these overlapping government-led strategies. The workshop aims to address questions such as: What are the effects of these economic rivalries, both real and perceived, on the GCC economies and intra-bloc relations? Will this overlap foster economic growth across the GCC equally, or will it produce winners and losers? Will it encourage innovation and healthy competition, or will it risk duplication and resource waste? What is the role of the GCC as a regional institution—a facilitator of coordination, a platform for policy alignment, or a bystander to mounting rivalries?This workshop invites comparative studies focusing on more than one Gulf state from economic and political economy perspectives. Scholars are encouraged to consider competition among GCC states in specific sectors (e.g., aviation, logistics, renewable energy, sports, art, AI, finance, etc.), comparative analyses of national strategies, and the evolving role of state-owned enterprises and sovereign wealth funds in contributing to regional rivalries. Research examining the efficacy of the GCC as an economic union in this context is also welcome. Papers employing qualitative, quantitative, or mixed methods are all welcome, provided they offer comparative insights across more than one GCC state. Papers from a range of disciplines or from an interdisciplinary perspective are welcome –– but they should be written to be accessible also to an informed audience beyond the discipline in question.




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Workshop

Directors


Prof. Gerd

Nonneman

Professor of International Relations and Gulf Studies at Georgetown University in Qatar



Glnar

Eskandar

Economic Specialist


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