Nah,I am just telling the uncomfortable truth.
That is not gonna help either,Unless KSA reform its domestic educational system.Which is primarily designed to maintain the rule of absolute monarchy.As a result, Saudi youth "generally lacks the education and technical skills the private sector needs".Indeed, such control has stifled critical thought, and as a result, the education system does not necessarily foster innovation and creativity; both of which are essential to the development.Vast majority of Saudis are employed in the public sector which is very much unproductive in nature.
While the country's productive private sector is overwhelmingly powered by the foreign workers who make up about a third of the country's 28 million residents.Despite all the effort from Saudi Govt there aren't enough Saudis to skilled enough to jobs in finance, engineering, and medicine and for the service sector, where many Saudis are reluctant to take jobs as, say, taxi drivers or hotel receptionists, and expect higher salaries than those paid to expatriate workers.