Qatar’s economic rebalancing towards consumer-facing and productivity enhancing sectors has "reshaped" employment landscape, leading to its realty sector become demand-driven rather than project-led, according to Knight Frank, an international independent property consultancy.While construction remains an important component of GDP (gross domestic product), its share has gradually declined from 13.4% in 2021 to 11.3% in 2024, as other sectors have gained in prominence, it said in a latest report. Output in accommodation and food services, arts and recreation, logistics, and real estate has expanded sharply since 2022, reflecting "Qatar’s successful effort to rebalance economic activity towards consumer-facing and productivity enhancing sectors", it said.This reorientation is also reshaping the employment landscape, with a growing proportion of jobs emerging in tourism, logistics, and digital services, according to Knight Frank. "As a result, the underlying fundamentals supporting the real estate market, from retail and hospitality to residential and commercial space, are becoming increasingly demand-driven rather than project-led," the report said.Frank highlighted that Qatar’s economic outlook remains "positive", underpinned by strong macroeconomic fundamentals, an expanding population, and a clear policy agenda centred on diversification and sustainability.Population growth is reinforcing domestic demand, it said, adding the number of residents aged 15 years and older has grown at a CAGR (compound annual growth rate) of 3.1% between 2022 and 2024, against just 0.9% in the preceding six years. "This expansion, combined with new long-term residency schemes such as the Mustaqel five-year visa, is fostering greater residential stability and supporting housing demand, particularly among skilled expatriates and entrepreneurs," it said.The continued execution of third National Development Strategy (2024–30) is expected to accelerate private sector participation, unlock new growth clusters in logistics, tourism, and digital services, and sustain long-term investor confidence, it said. "For the real estate sector, these dynamics translate into a supportive operating environment, steady demand for residential and hospitality assets, growing interest in industrial and logistics space, and a pipeline of mixed use projects, aligned with Qatar’s urban and economic transformation agenda," it said. Finding that strong fiscal management remains a cornerstone of Qatar’s resilience story; it said despite lower hydrocarbon prices in 2025, the government’s fiscal position remains comfortably above breakeven levels, with the IMF (International Monetary Fund) estimating a fiscal breakeven oil-equivalent price of $44.7 per barrel.Public debt has fallen from 72.6% of GDP in 2020 to 40.8% in 2024, and is projected to decline further by the end of 2025, reflecting pragmatic budgetary control and effective debt servicing strategies.