The End of Subsidy-Led Entrepreneurship
For much of the past two decades, SME policy in Oman followed a familiar Gulf logic. Capital was deployed to absorb unemployment, support self-employment, and preserve social stability. Funding success was measured by how many businesses were launched, not by how many scaled, exported, or survived without state backing.
Institutions such as the Al Raffd Fund embodied this approach. They succeeded in creating thousands of micro-enterprises, but they also entrenched a system where public capital behaved more like welfare than investment. Commercial discipline was secondary. Failure carried little consequence, and growth was rarely expected.
That model has now reached its natural limit. Fiscal pressure, demographic realities, and the demands of a more competitive regional economy have made subsidy-led entrepreneurship unsustainable. Oman’s response has been decisive.
What Marked a Structural Break

The operational launch of the Future Fund Oman represents a clear break from the past. This is not a rebranded grant program or a softer loan scheme. It is a shift in philosophy.
Under the Future Fund, the state is no longer distributing capital to maximize participation. It is allocating capital to maximize returns. Funding is tied to equity ownership, performance expectations, and the acceptance that many investments will fail.
This matters because it resets the relationship between the government and entrepreneurs. Capital is no longer an entitlement linked to nationality or employment objectives. It is risk capital, deployed selectively, priced accordingly, and judged by outcomes.
In practical terms, Oman has chosen to act less like a sponsor and more like an investor.
Inside the Future Fund Oman Model

Future Fund Oman is anchored within the Oman Investment Authority and capitalized at OMR 2 billion, to be deployed over five years. The headline figure attracts attention, but the strategic significance lies elsewhere.
Roughly 90 percent of the fund is allocated to large-scale industrial and infrastructure projects. The remaining 10 percent, approximately OMR 200 million, is dedicated to SMEs and startups. Within that allocation, 7 percent targets SMEs and 3 percent targets startups.
This capital is deployed through eight specialized investment vehicles spanning the company lifecycle, from early-stage equity to growth capital and private debt. By late 2025, the fund had approved 132 SME and venture investments, committing USD 56.7 million and deploying USD 37.4 million.
The metrics used to assess these investments are equally telling. Performance is measured using global venture benchmarks such as growth potential, technology adoption, and exit pathways. The focus has shifted from quantity of funding to quality of outcomes.
From Public Capital to Professional Capital

A critical feature of the Future Fund model is what the government has chosen not to do. It has not attempted to pick winners internally.
Sovereign funds are structurally ill-suited to early-stage investing. Decision cycles are slow, risk tolerance is uneven, and accountability frameworks discourage failure. Oman’s leadership has acknowledged this openly by outsourcing investment decisions to experienced global partners.
The IDG Oman Sustainable Fund, a USD 200 million partnership with IDG Capital, targets advanced manufacturing, cleantech, and information and communications technology. IDG’s track record includes early investments in Tencent and Baidu, and its mandate in Oman is explicitly commercial.
The eWTP Oman Fund, capitalized at USD 250 million and established with eWTP Arabia Capital, focuses on digital infrastructure such as logistics, cloud services, and fintech. The objective is ecosystem building, not small business support.
By importing external fund managers, Oman reduces execution risk while gaining access to global networks that can support exports, partnerships, and follow-on capital.
What the Portfolio Signals About State Priorities

The companies backed by Future Fund Oman illustrate how sharply priorities have shifted.
IO Kitchen, a cloud kitchen operator hosting more than 30 virtual brands, represents a platform approach to food services that emphasizes logistics and data rather than real estate.
Qpay, Oman’s first licensed buy now, pay later provider, reflects a strategic bet on fintech as a multiplier across retail and payments rather than a standalone vertical.
Nashid, a blockchain-based digital identity platform, signals an openness to backing deep infrastructure technologies that were previously considered too risky for public capital.
SafaQat, a digital procurement platform, targets inefficiencies in B2B tendering and enterprise purchasing.
These investments share a common theme. They are not designed to create self-employment. They are designed to create firms that can scale beyond Oman and compete regionally.
Solving the Debt Constraint, Not Just the Equity Gap

Equity attracts attention, but debt remains the primary constraint for most established SMEs. In Oman, commercial banks allocate less than 4 percent of lending to SMEs, largely due to collateral requirements and risk aversion.
Future Fund Oman has addressed this gap through a dedicated lending portfolio managed by the fintech platform Beehive. This partnership introduces faster credit assessment, shorter approval timelines, and alternative data models.
Loans can be approved within two weeks, a meaningful shift in a system where SME financing often takes months. The focus is on working capital and equipment financing for firms that are operational but constrained by liquidity.
This approach targets the so-called missing middle, businesses that are too large for microfinance but too risky for traditional banks.
The Structural Risks of State Venture Capital

The Future Fund model carries real risks.
First, market distortion remains a concern. When the state becomes the largest investor, private capital may hesitate to compete or may wait on the sidelines for public validation.
Second, venture capital depends on tolerance for failure. A small number of winners must offset multiple losses. Whether public institutions and audit bodies can accept this dynamic over time remains untested.
Third, capital alone does not guarantee outcomes. Regulatory rigidity, labor policies, and Omanisation requirements can limit the agility that venture-backed firms require. Funding a startup is easier than allowing it to operate with global talent and flexible structures.
These risks do not invalidate the strategy, but they define its constraints.
What This Means for Oman’s Next Entrepreneurial Class

Future Fund Oman represents a maturation of economic policy rather than an expansion of support. It replaces protection with competition and entitlement with expectation.
For founders, the message is clear. The state is willing to invest, but only in businesses that aim to grow, professionalize, and compete beyond local markets.
For private investors, the fund acts as a signal that Oman is serious about building investable companies, not just funding programs.
For policymakers, the experiment will test whether public institutions can coexist with venture-style risk, failure, and long time horizons.
If it succeeds, Oman will not just have funded startups. It will have reshaped the behavior and ambition of its entrepreneurial ecosystem, moving from subsidy dependence toward global relevance.
