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Gulf Cooperation Council

Regional trade bloc in the Middle East


Regional trade bloc in the Middle East

FieldValue
native_nameمجلس التعاون لدول الخلیج العربيّة
conventional_long_nameCooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf
common_nameGulf Cooperation Council
image_flagFlag of the Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf.svg
symbol_typeEmblem
image_symbolEmblem GCC.svg
symbol_width80px
image_mapCarte du Conseil de Coopération du Golfe.svg
map_width250px
map_captionMap indicating GCC members
membership{{unbulleted indent listBahrainKuwaitOman
admin_center_typeHeadquarters
admin_centerRiyadh, Saudi Arabia
official_languagesArabic
leader_title1Secretary general
leader_name1
leader_title2Supreme Council presidency
leader_name2United Arab Emirates
established
area_km22673108
percent_water0.6
population_estimate
population_estimate_year2023
population_density_km222.3
population_density_sq_mi57.7
GDP_PPP_year2021
GDP_PPP$3.655 trillion
GDP_PPP_per_capita$
GDP_nominal_year2021
GDP_nominal$2.250 trillion
GDP_nominal_per_capita$
currency{{Collapsible list
titlestylebackground:transparent;text-align:left;font-weight:normal;
title6 currencies
official_website
GDP_PPP_rank9th
GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank10th
GDP_nominal_rank7th
GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank35th
population_estimate_rank25th
HDI0.860
HDI_year2021
HDI_changeincrease
HDI_rank40th
Gini28.7
Gini_year2012
Gini_changedecrease
time_zoneUTC+3 to UTC+4

|Qatar |Saudi Arabia |United Arab Emirates | (ISO 4217 in parentheses) | (BHD) Bahraini Dinar | (AED) Emirati Dirham | (KWD) Kuwaiti Dinar | (OMR) Omani Rial | (QAR) Qatari Riyal | (SAR) Saudi Riyal}} The Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf (), also known as the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC; ), is a regional, intergovernmental, political, and economic union and military alliance comprising Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. The council's main headquarters is located in Riyadh, the capital of Saudi Arabia. The Charter of the GCC was signed on 25 May 1981, formally establishing the institution.

All current member states are monarchies, including three constitutional monarchies (Qatar, Kuwait, and Bahrain), two absolute monarchies (Saudi Arabia and Oman), and one federal monarchy (the United Arab Emirates, which is composed of seven member states, each of which is an absolute monarchy with its own emir). There have been discussions regarding the future membership of Jordan, Morocco, and Yemen. Iraq is the only Gulf Arab state that is not a GCC member.

During the Arab Spring in 2012, Saudi Arabia proposed to transform the GCC into a "Gulf Union" with tighter economic, political and military coordination, a move considered to be intended to counterbalance Iranian influence in the region; however, objections were raised by other countries. In 2014, Bahraini prime minister Khalifa bin Salman Al Khalifa said that current events in the region highlighted the importance of the proposal. The Peninsula Shield Force is the military arm of the GCC, formed in 1984.

History and founding

Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah of Kuwait, alongside the support of Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan of the UAE, played a crucial role in fostering the idea of closer cooperation among the Arab states of the Persian Gulf, laying the groundwork for the formation of the Gulf Cooperation Council. The members' shared vision for regional unity, security, and economic integration led to the official establishment of the GCC in 1981, strengthening the collective power and influence of the Gulf countries. The charter was signed in Arabic in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates,Article twenty two of the Charter of the Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf.

https://www.gcc-sg.org/en-us/AboutGCC/Pages/Primarylaw.aspx on 21 Rajab 1401 on the Islamic calendar (corresponding to 25 May 1981 on the Gregorian calendar).

The signatory states on the founding document are the only current members of the GCC. An economic agreement between the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council was signed on 11 November 1981 in Abu Dhabi, UAE. These countries are often referred to as "the GCC states".

Objectives

In 2001, the GCC Supreme Council set the following goals:

  • Customs union in January 2003.
  • Common market by 2007
  • Common currency by 2010

Oman announced in December 2006 that it would not be able to meet the 2010 target date for a common currency. Following the announcement that the central bank for the monetary union would be located in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, rather than in the UAE, they announced their withdrawal from the monetary union project in May 2009. The name Khaleeji has been proposed as a name for this currency. If realized, the GCC monetary union would be the second-largest supranational monetary union in the world, measured by the GDP of the common-currency area, following the Eurozone.

Other stated objectives include:

  • Formulating similar regulations in various fields such as religion, finance, trade, customs, tourism, legislation, and administration.
  • Fostering scientific and technical progress in industry, mining, agriculture, water, and animal resources.
  • Establishing scientific research centers.
  • Setting up joint ventures.
  • Unified military (Peninsula Shield Force).
  • Encouraging cooperation of the private sector.
  • Strengthening ties between their people.

The area has some of the fastest-growing economies in the world, mostly due to a boom in oil and natural gas revenues coupled with a building and investment boom backed by decades of saved petroleum revenues. In an effort to build a tax base and economic foundation before the reserves run out, the UAE's investment arms, including Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, retain over US$900 billion in assets. Other regional funds have several hundred billion dollars of assets under management.

The region is an emerging hotspot for events, including the 2006 Asian Games in Doha, Qatar. Doha also submitted an unsuccessful application for the 2016 Summer Olympics. Qatar would later host the 2022 FIFA World Cup. Recovery plans have been criticized for crowding out the private sector, failing to set clear priorities for growth, failing to restore weak consumer and investor confidence, and undermining long-term stability.

The logo of the GCC consists of two concentric circles. On the upper part of the larger circle, the phrase Bismillah - "in the name of God" - is written in Arabic, and on the lower part of the circle is written the council's full name. The inner circle contains an embossed hexagonal shape representing the six countries. The inside of the hexagon shows a map encompassing the Arabian Peninsula, on which the areas of the member countries are colored in brown, borderless.

Economy

Mergers and acquisitions

Companies and investors from GCC countries are active in mergers and acquisitions. Since 1999, more than 5,200 transactions with a known value of 573 billion had been announced. Investors include a number of sovereign wealth funds.

Internal market

A common market was launched on 1 January 2008, easing the movement of goods and services, with plans to create a fully integrated single market. Implementation later lagged behind, after the 2008 financial crisis. The creation of a customs union began in 2003 and was completed and fully operational by 1 January 2015. In January 2015, the common market was also further integrated, covering full equality among GCC citizens to work in government and private sectors, the ability to access social insurance and retirement coverage, real estate ownership rights, capital movement, and access to education, health and other social services, in all member states. However, some barriers remained in the free movement of goods and services. The coordination of taxation systems, accounting standards, and civil legislation is currently in progress. The interoperability of professional qualifications, insurance certificates, and identity documents is also underway.

Monetary union

In 2014, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia took major steps to ensure the creation of a single currency. Kuwait's finance minister said the four members are pushing ahead with the monetary union, but said some "technical points" need to be cleared. He added, "A common market and common central bank would also position the GCC as one entity that would have great influence on the international financial system". The implementation of a single currency and the creation of a central bank are overseen by the Monetary Council.

There is currently a degree to which a nominal GCC single currency already exists. Businesses trade using a basket of GCC currencies, just as before the Euro was introduced, the European Currency Unit (ECU) had been used as a nominal medium of exchange.

Infrastructure

The GCC launched common economic projects to promote and facilitate integration and to increase resilience. The GCC Interconnection Grid connects the power grids of member states. In 2009, it initiated operations, and by 2013, all six members were connected. A water interconnection project has been discussed, but as of January 2023, there have been no notable developments. Unlike other leading aviation regions like the European Union, members have not agreed to an open skies policy. As such, GCC airlines do not have unlimited market access rights to member states and compete to capture international air traffic flows.

The GCC has also launched major rail projects to connect the peninsula. The railways are expected to fuel intra-regional trade while helping reduce fuel consumption. Over US$200 billion will be invested to develop about 40000 km of rail network across the GCC, according to Oman's Minister of Transport and Communications. According to Ramiz Al Assar, Resident World Bank advisor for the GCC, it will link the six member states as a regional transport corridor, further integrating with the national railway projects, deepening economic, social, and political integration, and it will be developed from a sustainable perspective.

The project, estimated to be worth $15.5 billion, was scheduled to be completed by 2021. As of May 2022, railway construction in the UAE and Saudi Arabia has progressed significantly, but other members' efforts have lagged. Saudi Arabian Railways, Etihad Rail, and their respective national governments have invested 15 billion dollars as of early 2015 into railway infrastructure to create rail networks for transporting freight, connecting cities, and reducing transport times.

Free trade agreements

The Gulf Cooperation Council has free trade agreements with the following countries:

Nation (s)No of nations
representedNameSignedEffectiveCoverageRef.
**European Free Trade Association**
Iceland
Liechtenstein
Norway
Switzerland4EFTA–Gulf Cooperation Council Free Trade Agreement22 June 20091 July 2014Goods & Services
Singapore1Gulf Cooperation Council–Singapore Free Trade Agreement15 December 20081 September 2013Goods & Services

Signed

  • South Korea (Signed 28 December 2023)

Concluded

  • New Zealand (Concluded 31 October 2024)

Negotiations

  • Australia (Since July 2007)
  • Japan (Since December 2024)
  • Malaysia (Since May 2025)
  • Turkey (Since March 2024)
  • United Kingdom (Since June 2022) - Gulf Cooperation Council–United Kingdom Free Trade Agreement

Politics and governance

Supreme Council

The GCC Supreme Council is composed of the heads of state of the member states. It is the highest decision-making entity of the GCC, setting its vision and goals. Decisions on important issues require unanimous approval, while issues on procedural matters require a majority. Each member state has one vote. The presidency rotates based on the Arabic alphabetical order of the names of the member states.

Ministerial Council

The Ministerial Council is composed of the Foreign Ministers of all the member states. It convenes every three months. It formulates policies and makes recommendations to promote cooperation and achieve coordination among the member states when implementing ongoing projects. Decisions are submitted in the form of recommendations, which the Supreme Council can approve. The Ministerial Council is also responsible for the preparation of meetings of the Supreme Council and its agenda. The voting procedure in the Ministerial Council is the same as in the Supreme Council.

Secretariat General

The Secretariat is the executive arm of the Gulf Cooperation Council. It takes decisions within its authority, and implements decisions approved by the Supreme or Ministerial Council. The Secretariat also compiles studies relating to cooperation, coordination, and planning for common actions, and occasionally releases reports regarding the work done by the GCC as a whole and the implementation of its own decisions. The current Secretary-General is Nayef Falah Mubarak Al Hajraf, and his deputies include Abdulaziz Al Auwaishig and Khalifa Alfadhel.

Monetary Council

On 15 December 2009, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia announced the creation of a Monetary Council to introduce a single currency for the union. The board of the council, which set a timetable and action plan for establishing a central bank and chose a currency regime, met for the first time on 30 March 2010. Kuwaiti foreign minister Mohammad Sabah Al-Sabah said on 8 December 2009 that a single currency may take up to ten years to establish. Oman and the UAE later announced their withdrawal from the proposed currency.

In 2014, major moves were taken to ensure the launch of a single currency. Kuwait's finance minister stated that a currency should be implemented without delay. Negotiations with the UAE and Oman to expand the monetary union were renewed.

Patent Office

Main article: GCC Patent Office

The GCC Patent Office was approved in 1992 and established soon after in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Applications are filed and prosecuted in the Arabic language before it and grants patents valid in all GCC member states, but it is a separate office from the Saudi Arabian Patent Office. The first GCC patent was granted in 2002. As of 2013, it employed about 30 patent examiners.

Peninsula Shield Force

Main article: Peninsula Shield Force

Amidst the Bahraini uprising, Saudi Arabia and the UAE sent ground troops to Bahrain to protect vital infrastructure such as the airport and highway system. Kuwait and Oman refrained from sending troops. Instead, Kuwait sent a navy unit.

The Secretary-General of the GCC strongly endorsed the use of international force in Libya. GCC member states joined coalition efforts to enforce the no-fly zone. In September 2014, GCC members Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, UAE and Qatar, and pending member Jordan commenced air operations against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in Syria. Saudi Arabia and the UAE, however, are among the states that oppose the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria, whereas Qatar has historically supported it. They also pledged other support, including operating training facilities for Syrian rebels in Saudi Arabia, and allowing the use of their airbases by other countries fighting ISIL. Some GCC countries also send some troops to fight the opposition government in Yemen.

GCC Standardization Organization

Main article: GCC Standardization Organization

The GCC Standardization Organization is the standardization organization of the GCC. Yemen is also a member of the GCC Standardization Organization.

Gulf Organization for Industrial Consulting

The Gulf Organization for Industrial Consulting (GOIC) was founded in 1976 by the six GCC member states; Yemen joined the organization in 2009. It is headquartered in Doha, Qatar. The organization chart of GOIC includes the board members and the General Secretariat. The Board is formed by member state representatives appointed by their governments.

Secretaries-General

No.ImageNameCountryTenure
1[[File:Abdullah Yaccoub Bishara, Kuwait UN Ambassador United Nations, New York (cropped).jpg50px]]title=Bishara, Abdullahurl=http://rulers.org/indexb3.htmlpublisher=Rulersaccess-date=16 March 2013}}Kuwait26 May 1981 – April 1993
2title=Profileurl=http://www.ecssr.ac.ae/ECSSR/print/prf.jsp?lang=en&prfId=/Profile/Profiles_2607.xmlpublisher=ECSSRaccess-date=11 April 2013archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131202234150/http://www.ecssr.ac.ae/ECSSR/print/prf.jsp?lang=en&prfId=%2FProfile%2FProfiles_2607.xmlarchive-date=2 December 2013 }}United Arab EmiratesApril 1993 – April 1996
3[[File:Jamil Al-Hejailan.png50px]]author=Malcolm C. Pecktitle=The A to Z of the Gulf Arab Statesurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=PUiazV0SVaQC&pg=PA111access-date=11 April 2013date=12 April 2010publisher=Scarecrow Pressisbn=978-0-8108-7636-1page=111}}Saudi ArabiaApril 1996 – 31 March 2002
4[[File:Abdul Rahman bin Hamad Al Attiyah.jpg50px]]last=Toumifirst=Habibtitle=Oman endorses Al Mutawaurl=http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Oman+endorses+Al+Mutawa.-a0213099505via=The Free Libraryaccess-date=11 April 2013newspaper=Gulf Newsdate=29 November 2009}}Qatar1 April 2002 – 31 March 2011
5[[File:Dr Abdullatif bin Rashid Al Zaani & Cornel Feruta (01117855) (48747904168) (cropped).jpg50px]]Abdullatif bin Rashid Al ZayaniBahrain1 April 2011 – 31 January 2020
6[[File:Nayef Falah Mubarak Al Hajraf (cropped).jpg50px]]Nayef Falah Mubarak Al HajrafKuwait1 February 2020 – present

Member states

There are six member states of the union:

CountryPopulation (2023, United Nations)Area
(km2)GDP (nominal)GDP (PPP)HDI(USD million)Per capita ($)(Int$ million)Per capita (Int$)
Bahrain1,485,010786.544,87028,38595,78460,5960.875 (very high)
Oman4,644,384309,500104,90221,960201,53142,1880.816 (very high)
Qatar2,716,39111,581219,57083,891326,731124,8340.855 (very high)
Saudi Arabia36,947,0252,149,6901,061,90229,9222,300,96764,8360.875 (very high)
United Arab Emirates9,516,87183,600498,97849,451890,17188,2210.911 (very high)
Kuwait4,310,10817,818164,71333,646259,64053,0370.831 (very high)
**Total:**59,619,7892,572,975.52,094,935247,255

Associated members

The associate membership of Iraq in certain GCC-related institutions was cancelled after the invasion of Kuwait.

Yemen was in negotiations for GCC membership in 2007 and hoped to join by 2016. Yemen is already a member of the GCC Standardization Authority, the Gulf Organization for Industrial Consulting (GOIC), the GCC Auditing and Accounting Authority, the Gulf Radio and TV Authority, the GCC Council of Health Ministers, the GCC Education and Training Bureau, the GCC Council of Labour & and Social Affairs Ministers, and The Gulf Cup Football Tournament. The Council issued directives that all the necessary legal measures be taken, so that Yemen would have the same rights and obligations of GCC member states in those institutions.

Sports

Main article: GCC Games

The union has served as a grouping for sports co-operation and competition. The GCC states have an annual meeting of the Youth and Sports Ministers of each state to boost youth and sports initiatives in the region. The promotion of the hosting of international sports events has also served an economic purpose for the union's countries, leading to investment and development in the region.

The GCC Games, a quadrennial multi-sport event, was established by the union and first held in 2011. There are numerous long-running GCC Championships for individual sports, including: the Gulf Cooperation Council Athletics Championships (first held in 1986; youth section from 2000) sailing, basketball, swimming, tennis, gymnastics (senior and youth levels), weightlifting, futsal, snooker, and table tennis.

  1. GCC Athletics Championships
  2. GCC Swimming Championships
  3. GCC Gymnastics Championships
  4. GCC Shooting Championships
  5. GCC Football Championships
  6. GCC Futsal Championships
  7. GCC Basketball Championships
  8. GCC Handball Championships
  9. GCC Volleyball Championships
  10. GCC Ice Hockey Championships
  11. GCC Badminton Championships
  12. GCC Table Tennis Championships
  13. GCC Tennis Championships
  14. GCC Sailing Championships
  15. GCC Rowing Championships
  16. GCC Chess Championships
  17. GCC Billiards and Snooker Championships
  18. GCC Bowling Championships
  19. GCC Judo Championships Since 1998
  20. GCC Karate Championships
  21. GCC Taekwondo Championships
  22. GCC Weightlifting Championships

Football, futsal, and beach soccer competitions

CompetitionYearChampionsTitleRunners-upNext editionDatesMen's national teamsWomen's national teams
GCC Games Football20151st
GCC Games Futsal[2022](2022-gcc-games)1st
GCC Games Beach Socer20151st
GCC Youth Games20241st
GCC Games Futsal[2022](2022-gcc-games)2nd

2014 Qatar–Saudi diplomatic conflict

Main article: Qatar–Saudi Arabia diplomatic conflict

Qatar's support for the Muslim Brotherhood across the Middle East-North Africa (MENA) region, Hamas and radical Islamists in Libya, has led to increasing tensions with other Arab states of the Persian Gulf. These tensions came to a head during a March 2014 meeting of the GCC, after which the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain recalled their ambassadors to Qatar.

Some financial economists have interpreted the 2014 Saudi–Qatari rift as a tangible political sign of a growing economic rivalry between oil and natural gas producers, which could "have deep and long-lasting consequences" beyond MENA.

2017 Qatar diplomatic crisis

On 5 June 2017, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt had officially cut diplomatic ties with Qatar. Saudi Arabia said it took the decision to cut diplomatic ties due to Qatar's "embrace of various terrorist and sectarian groups aimed at destabilising the region", including the Muslim Brotherhood, al-Qaeda, ISIL and Iran-supported groups in Saudi Arabia's eastern province of Qatif. Political researcher Islam Hassan viewed this rift as a continuation of Qatar's foreign policy rivalry with Saudi Arabia and the UAE.

In June 2017, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Bahrain banned Qataris and their businesses. Qataris were not allowed to enter or live in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, or Bahrain, unless they had a spouse living there, in which case they were required to carry a visa in order to enter these countries. Qatar Airways aircraft were not allowed to fly over these countries. Saudi Arabia stated that it would turn its land border with Qatar into a canal, known as the Salwa Canal, in 2018. The plan was abandoned in 2019.

On 4 January 2021, Kuwait National TV announced that Saudi Arabia would restore all diplomatic ties with Qatar, reopen air space to Qatari aircraft, and reopen the Qatar–Saudi land border. Later that evening, it was announced that Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, and Egypt had agreed to restore ties with Qatar. On 4 January 2021, it was made official at the Al-Ula summit, where the blockading countries, along with Qatar, signed an official agreement and ended the rift after three years and seven months.

GCC and US-GCC Summit meetings

#YearHeld in
11993Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

2022 US-GCC Summit

GCC and Central Asia-GCC Summit meetings

#YearHeld in
12023Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
22024Tashkent or Samarkand, Uzbekistan

GCC and ASEAN-GCC Summit meetings

Main article: ASEAN-GCC Summit

#YearHeld in
12023Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
#YearHeld in
22025Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

GCC—Pakistan relations

In January 2022, the GCC and Pakistan finalised the Joint Action Plan for Strategic Dialogue (2022–26). In September 2023, the GCC and Pakistan signed a preliminary deal on a free trade agreement.

GCC and EU Summit meetings

On 16 October 2024, the first GCC and the European Union summit was held in Brussels, Belgium. It was co-chaired by Charles Michel and the rotating GCC President Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, under the theme "Strategic Partnership for Peace and Prosperity". The Human Rights Watch requested the EU to take advantage of the first summit with Gulf leaders, and challenge the involvement of the UAE and other neighbouring states in the Sudan civil war. The EU director for HRW, Phillippe Dam, said the union leaders should "publicly press" the UAE to stop arms supply to the RSF and push the militia to end the war.

Notes

References

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