Yes, the future of the economy of Middle East is great and investing in Bahrain and good thing to do. In 2014, the Middle East and North Africa's gross domestic product growth (real) was 2.4%. Infact the Gulf's oil exporters are growing fastest and the young population is a major driver of medium-term growth.
steal
The Middle East and Southwest Asia's economy depend on the export of oil. Several countries in Africa have a dependence on imported oil.
Free economy and Command economy
Kuwait !
There is no country in the Middle East that rejects capitalism. All Middle Eastern countries have a predominantly capitalist economy. Some have greater or fewer socialist support mechanisms and other have Islamic financial mechanisms that run in parallel to a capitalist economy, but none have an exclusively or majority non-capitalist economy.
So China can trade and share goods with the Middle East, Middle west, and Europe
The main concern was because the US economy depended largely on oil from the Middle East. Any disruption in the supply would have catastrophic effects on the economy.
Middle east countries such as Iraq, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan
becoming, as they wage wars against countries in the middle east,, they'll be able to open up borders, the wolf packs can go in and rape them of their resources
somewhere around $500 for economy class I believe.
steal from other country's. or bomb each other
It depends on what "in" refers to. If the question is geographic, i.e. Is China part of the region called the Middle East, then No. China is part of the Far East or East Asia, which is a very different region. If the question is about involvement, i.e. Is China involved politically with the Middle East, then, Yes. China needs an incredible amount of energy to power its economy and much of that energy comes overland from the Middle East, from countries such as Iran and Iraq. Therefore, China has a strongly developed Middle East policy.