‘Healthcare in Saudi Arabia – Opportunities in the Sector – May 2018’ report highlights expansionary drive
Increasing demand for new facilities
01 Jun 2018
IN Saudi Arabia rising demand for healthcare and government initiatives favoring increased private sector participation, look set to drive expansion in the sector and open new doors for investors. Saudi Arabia: Knight Frank, recently released a report discussing the healthcare sector in Saudi Arabia: ‘Healthcare in Saudi Arabia – Opportunities in the Sector – May 2018’
The key findings of the report are:
In the short to long term the healthcare space in Saudi Arabia presents itself as a sector with high growth opportunities. While, demand for healthcare in Saudi Arabia is set to continue growing. Key drivers include a demographic shift and an increase in health insurance coverage.
Population dynamics are forecast to shift, with population between the ages of 40 and 59 increasing by 1.5 times and population over the age of 60 increasing more than 3 times from 2017 to 2035. This will increase demand for health services and broaden the requirement for specialist care.
Forecasted demand gap due to population growth and facilities requirements, create a business case for the development of additional facilities in the country. Saudi Arabia requires an additional 20,000 hospital beds by 2035 (based on current density) to meet the expected population growth in the country.
The Kingdom’s National Transformation Plan (NTP) and privatization program have placed healthcare on a fast trajectory to privatization and growth over the coming years, offering number of opportunities to existing operators/ investors and new entrants.
From a value perspective, healthcare investments generate attractive yields. The yield range varies due to the risk/return profile of the investment i.e age of the asset, length of lease tenure, covenant strength, security and position of the operations on the business life cycle.
“Over the next decade, population dynamics are forecast to shift, with a significant increase in the population over 40,” noted Dr. Gireesh Kumar, senior manager, Healthcare, “This indicates an expected increase in the burden of life