
Gulf Powers Ahead on Digital and Logistics Frontiers as Global AI Trust Deficit Simmers
Saudi Arabia nears full digital connectivity and Oman’s payment systems surge, while integrated Gulf logistics corridors reshape trade, but studies from Sweden, Brazil and Jordan expose a widening gap between AI adoption and consumer confidence.
Saudi Arabia’s establishments now operate with a near-universal 98.1 percent internet penetration rate, and reliance on e-government services has reached 93.2 percent, according to official statistics. In a striking signal of corporate appetite, adoption of artificial intelligence technologies among Saudi firms jumped 20 percent in 2025. This digital saturation, unfolding at breathtaking speed, is not a standalone phenomenon. Across the Gulf, a profound structural transformation is redrawing the lines between trade, finance, and energy.
Oman’s central bank data captures a parallel acceleration: the value of local electronic payment gateway transactions surged 76.3 percent last year to RO3.2 billion, while QR-code payments recorded the fastest growth at 133.5 percent. The digital shift is being anchored by physical infrastructure. In Sharjah, the Sajaa Logistics Complex, a multimodal platform spanning more than three million square feet, is being developed to handle over 850,000 containers annually. An integrated logistics corridor now links the emirate’s ports with Oman’s through land border crossings, a move the Sharjah Chamber of Commerce and Industry has hailed as a strategic pillar for regional supply-chain efficiency. Credit Oman, meanwhile, reported over RO180 million in insured domestic sales, underscoring the financial ecosystem supporting this expansion.
Industrial strategies are being layered onto this digital and logistical backbone. Oman’s public authority for special economic zones is assigning each zone a distinct competitive identity to attract foreign and domestic capital. Chinese investors have responded with plans for a major solar manufacturing complex and a regional cybersecurity hub, while a government report identifies six cybersecurity investment opportunities, including an AI-powered Security Operations Centre in Muscat. Even the hydrocarbons sector is being recalibrated: the Ministry of Energy and Minerals is pushing advanced recovery technologies and renewables to meet a net-zero target by 2050, simultaneously raising output and lowering emissions.
Yet outside the Gulf, a more anxious relationship with technology is coming into focus. A Swedish commentary notes that millions willingly hand over bank documents and medical records to AI assistants, but trust in the underlying technology remains stubbornly low—behaviour reminiscent of social media’s early, unguarded years. In Brazil, an Influence.me and Opinion Box study found that 84 percent of social-media users value human-produced content and distrust AI-generated images, a sentiment with direct consequences for brands and creators. Jordan’s Visa Stay Secure survey paints a similarly conflicted picture: while 80 percent of consumers use AI for shopping, only 16 percent trust AI agents to complete checkout, and 81 percent believe AI will be critical in fighting fraud—even as almost half have encountered scams on social media.
Viewed from London or Washington, the juxtaposition is instructive. The Gulf’s ambitions—integrating ports, digitising payments, attracting high-tech manufacturing, and monetising AI—depend on trusted, seamless exchange. As regulators in Muscat, Riyadh and Sharjah push forward, the global trust deficit reported from Stockholm, São Paulo and Amman serves as a reminder that the hard currency of the next phase of digital growth will be not just algorithmic mastery, but the confidence that consumers and businesses place in the systems being built.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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The Gulf monarchies are racing ahead on digital and logistics frontiers: near-universal internet connectivity, surging AI adoption, integrated port-airport corridors and Shariah-compliant financing are shaping an ecosystem designed to become a global hub for future-proof infrastructure.
As AI uptake explodes, a deep trust deficit is widening: users eagerly hand over personal data yet remain wary of the technology, fueling calls for political intervention to reclaim democratic control over artificial intelligence systems.
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