Broadsheet

Gates: Saudi women vital to economy

It shouldn't take an entrepreneur of Bill Gates' standing -- namely being the world's richest person -- to unveil this truth to the public: To be truly competitive on the world stage, a country's economy must make use of women's talents as well as men's. And it doesn't hurt, either.

In a side meeting during the World Economic Forum, Gates told a story about recently speaking at a business seminar in Saudi Arabia, the Associated Press reports. The audience was segregated by gender, with a large panel dividing the fully veiled women -- Gates described it as a "sea of black" -- from the men. A participant asked whether the country could realistically become "one of the world's most competitive economies by 2010." "I said, 'Well, if you're not fully utilizing half the talent in the country, you're not going to get too close to the top,'" said Gates. The audience's response was as split as the crowd: "One side loved it," he said.

This comes just days after Saudi Princess Lolwah Al-Faisal publicly voiced her desire to see women given the right to drive in her country. Both statements are more directly connected than just an underlying belief in gender parity, though; without the ability to drive themselves or rely on a chauffeur, women less fortunate than Al-Faisal have very limited access to work.

So, big ups to Bill Gates for voicing what should be the obvious. It's more than enough -- not to mention his out-of-this-world humanitarian work -- to make us pretend we never saw this creepy picture of him sandwiched between Hooters girls.

Shacking up, not settling down
Horrors! Young couples are moving in together without plans for marriage
Slipped through the cracks
Roundup: Is porn ditching narrative? Plus romance novels, eating placenta and more
Pope tries to school Obama on abortion
The two meet for the first time in Vatican City and get straight to business
A slap in the face to fat girls
Beth Ditto may be a hip plus-size icon, but her new clothing line feels like an insulting throwback to a 1985 Kmart

Recent Posts

Slipped through the cracks
Roundup: Is porn ditching narrative? Plus romance novels, eating placenta and more
Pope tries to school Obama on abortion
The two meet for the first time in Vatican City and get straight to business
A slap in the face to fat girls
Beth Ditto may be a hip plus-size icon, but her new clothing line feels like an insulting throwback to a 1985 Kmart

Full Archive

RSS Feed

Posts by date

July 2009
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031

Tips or Comments?

E-mail us at broadsheet@salon.com.