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How is the economic situation in UAE?

HussainRx8

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I can imagine it is good given the low oil prices, low tourism revenues, and social distancing measures due to COVID-19.

But have there been any large-scale layoffs? Are expats leaving?
 
Heard about forced pay cuts for lot of companies
 
Oil being so low in price will seriously damage the UAE, add tourism and it's a disaster because they have nothing much else.

However it will pick up again in the late summer. Their advantage is many visitors are wealthy and those people are still wealthy in general. They will offer incentives to visit Dubai but another big blow is the Expo 2020 will now be in 2021.

I think at lot of expats will leave UAE as they have been very strict, residents forced to remain.
 
It depends. Dubai doesn"t rely on oil as much as Abu Dhabi does, then again it was Abu Dhabi that bailed out Dubai in the financial crash.
 
UAE deosnt rely on oil anymore, its economy is based on tourism which is dead, however as soon as the lockdowns end i can see everyone running off on holidays,
 
UAE deosnt rely on oil anymore, its economy is based on tourism which is dead, however as soon as the lockdowns end i can see everyone running off on holidays,

Highly doubt people would go on vacations in the near-term given the depth of the global recession. UAE's economy was already weak in the run up to this crisis.
 
I guess probably not as many layoffs since most companies are multinationals with strong balance sheets. But I'm curious what the long-term outlook is for the UAE economy. To me it seems that their economy has already peaked and is now struggling to support growth.

Speaking of Dubai, I might be wrong but most of its economy relies on service sector and construction. Service sector demand is probably closely tied to tourism. Both tourism and construction tend to be the most cyclical parts of the economy.

I'm really curious what their long-term strategy is. Until now, all what they have done is to transition from one cyclical industry (oil) to another (tourism and construction).
 
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UAE deosnt rely on oil anymore, its economy is based on tourism which is dead, however as soon as the lockdowns end i can see everyone running off on holidays,


That is such a wrong statement , I don't know what to make of it.....

The UAE is hugely dependent on oil.

Dubai less so because of tourism and real estate and of course Emirates Airlines, all of which are being hit now

But Abu Dhabi and the rest are very dependent on oil
 
I guess probably not as many layoffs since most companies are multinationals with strong balance sheets. But I'm curious what the long-term outlook is for the UAE economy. To me it seems that their economy has already peaked and is now struggling to support growth.

.

Laying off means 2 things
1) The employer has to fund the ticket back home for the staff (once flights open as they are now all closed)

2) He has to fund their gratuity which can run into hundreds of thousands, safe to say most companies do not have funds to pay off gratuity of 20-30% staff in one go

So they are mostly either putting staff on unpaid leave or reducing salaries.
 
whatever happens in gulf countries, immediate effect falls on desi people like indians, pakistanis, bangladeshis, sri lankans, nepal etc.,

They will fire most of these people I am afraid
 
Wait and see how UAE's economy is going to spiral down in Q3 and Q4. Unfortunately Indians, Pakistanis, Bangladeshis will be the most affected.
 
whatever happens in gulf countries, immediate effect falls on desi people like indians, pakistanis, bangladeshis, sri lankans, nepal etc.,

They will fire most of these people I am afraid
Which in turn affects those economies due to lack of remittances of foreign exchange, especially the likes of Bangladesh and Pakistan. Although the low oil price does offset some of that by lowering the oil import costs.
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/pakistan-seeks-trade-deals-with-saudi-uae-oman-official-says-2021-09-26/

Pakistan will pursue individual trade deals with Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Oman, a Pakistani official said on Sunday, as talks with the Gulf Cooperation Council remain stalled.

The GCC, which includes those three countries plus Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain, started free trade talks with Pakistan in 2004. It has not implemented a free trade deal since 2015.

Pakistani official Abdul Razak Dawood told Reuters on Sunday the South Asian nation hoped bilateral negotiations for preferential trade deals with the three Gulf Arab states would start in the next 6-12 months.

"We feel it is far better to do individual (deals) at the moment rather than with the GCC as a bloc," he said in Dubai.

A preferential trade deal typically gives certain products preferential access such as by reducing or removing tariffs.

Dawood said the negotiations would cover a limited number goods and would not be as comprehensive as a free trade agreement, though over time the deals, if secured, could be expanded.

He did not say which goods Pakistan would seek to include.

The UAE announced this month it would seek broad economic agreements covering trade and investments with eight countries, including India, Britain and Turkey but not Pakistan.

Saudi, Emirati and Omani officials could not be immediately reached for comment on the Pakistani official's comments.

Dawood, the commerce advisor to the prime minister, is in Dubai to assess preparations for Pakistan's participation at the six month Expo world fair being held there from next month.

He said Muslim-majority Pakistan would highlight safety and diversity at Expo, which he hoped would lead to an increase in tourists and investments in the South Asian nation.

This month, New Zealand's cricket team pulled out of an upcoming tour of Pakistan over security concerns.

"We were not expecting something like this to happen and that is the type of perception that we have to overcome," Dawood said.
 
Sixteen people are dead and nine others injured after a fire at a residential building in Dubai, local media report.

The blaze happened in the Al-Ras area, one of the oldest parts of Dubai. It is home to many migrant workers and traders.

The fire broke out on the fourth floor of the five-storey building, according to local media reports.

Dubai Civil Defence said it was caused by a lack of compliance with building security and safety requirements.

Fire crews arrived on the scene at 12:41 local time (09:41 GMT) on Saturday.

The Al-Ras area is near the city's gold and spice markets, which are popular tourist attractions.

Dubai Civil Defence told UAE newspaper The National that an investigation into the deadly blaze was under way.

It said it was important that "residential and commercial building owners and residents" fully comply "with security and safety requirements and guidelines to avoid accidents and protect people's lives".

Among the dead are four Indian and three Pakistani nationals, local media say.

Salinga Gudu told The National that his brother Gudu Saliyakoondu, a watchman from India's Tamil Nadu state, had died trying to save residents inside the building.

"I was so scared because that is the building my brother works in. He went up to help and never came back down," he said.

No-one has yet been arrested as part of the investigation.

BBC
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">I am very sad to learn about the death of three Pakistanis in a residential building fire in Dubai. I extend my heartfelt condolences to the bereaved families over the tragedy. Have directed Pakistan's Mission in the UAE to extend support to the affected families.</p>— Shehbaz Sharif (@CMShehbaz) <a href="https://twitter.com/CMShehbaz/status/1647797866763624449?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 17, 2023</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Inna lillahi wa inna ilaihi rajiun

This was by far the worst ever residential fire accident by casualties in the UAE

Irony is that some 70/80/90/100 story towers in South Dubai have had plenty of fires over the last decade, gutting dozens of flats, but alhamdulillah there never were fatalities in any of them due to swift building evacuation. Only some injured people because of smoke inhalation

One tower named oddly The Torch where we were about to rent in 2014 has had multiple fires but no injuries ever

This fire was in the old part of town where a lot of Pakistanis live and the sheer number of fatalities is very tragic
 
$34 Million For Sand? Dubai Island Sale Sets Record For Vacant Land

The 24,500-square-foot empty parcel is on the sought-after Jumeirah Bay Island.

This isn't a spectacular mansion. It's not a luxury penthouse or a designer apartment.

It's a bunch of sand on a human-made island in Dubai, and it just sold on April 19 for 125 million dirhams ($34 million), setting a record in a market that continues to benefit from an influx of foreign wealth.

The 24,500-square-foot empty parcel is on the sought-after Jumeirah Bay Island, a seahorse-shaped piece of land accessible by bridge from the Dubai mainland. That works out to more than 5,000 dirhams per square foot, which the brokerage on the deal, Knight Frank, identified as a new high. The buyer, who doesn't live in the United Arab Emirates, is planning to build a family vacation home on the property. His identity wasn't disclosed.

"It's 125 million for sand," says Andrew Cummings, head of prime residential at Knight Frank in Dubai. "Everything that's been making the press has predominantly been spectacular villas, it's been incredible penthouses and all this stuff. But this is just a massive record breaker for a land plot."

The property was purchased two years ago for 36.5 million dirhams, according to the Dubai Land Department, netting the seller a tidy 88.5 million-dirham profit.

The runup to the city becoming such a heady real estate market has been fueled by high oil prices, a desire by the world's rich to park wealth in property and a sense that low-tax, low-crime Dubai is a haven in times of pandemic and war.

Russian citizens have been snapping up properties in a city that's still welcoming them with open arms, while new, long-term resident "golden" visas are attracting others with wealth to invest in Dubai real estate as well. Once hampered by overbuilding, the city now has what some brokers say is an undersupply of properties-especially on the high end.

"Sellers are in quite a strong position at the moment to dictate where the prices are, because there are such limited options available for people to choose from, especially beachfront," says Knight Frank's Lyndsey Redstone, one of the brokers on the deal.

The parcel that sold last week is one of only 128 originally offered on Jumeirah Bay Island by government-backed developer Meraas Holding, making it quite exclusive compared with, for example, the thousands of homes on the iconic Palm Jumeirah development. All of the parcels were initially sold off years ago, and some have since been flipped at a handsome profit. The master development rules prevent the land from being subdivided, but some buyers have combined plots to create space for megamansions, Cummings says.

Only a handful of homes on the island have been completed. Some are under construction, and ground has yet to be broken on many others.

The island is also home to the Bulgari Resort, one of the most expensive hotels in the city, as well as the future Bulgari Lighthouse tower, where apartment sale prices have been reaching highs before it's even built. The top penthouse-a nine-bedroom apartment with five parking spaces-sold for 410 million dirhams in February.

Real estate brokers predict records will continue to be broken. The seller in the Jumeirah Bay Island transaction, for example, also owns an identical plot next to the first. He plans to offer it for 135 million dirhams.

https://sports.ndtv.com/ipl-2023/vi...or-rcb-with-100th-ipl-catch-of-career-3973561
 
All through 2022 there has been a huge influx of ultra rich Russians, they pay in cash, outbid offers for property, so sectors catering to them are doing really well.

Cash collection is a huge increasing problem in Dubai in the contracting business, and so many small businesses are closing down (those that work on credit) because the government and larger local companies often dont pay their dues
It is shocking but anyone who has done business in Dubai knows these risks.

And there is a law on defamation meant to protect companies which steal your money by either not paying salaries or bills. I.e. you cant name any company refusing to pay for work done in social media.
 

Trump thanks UAE for ‘generous’ investment in AI​


Here’s a roundup of some of the US president’s remarks:

  • Trump tells Sheikh Mohammed that the pair have been “good friends” for a long time. “You’re a great warrior, a very strong man, a brilliant man, a man of vision like few others,” the US president says.
  • In a dig at his predecessor Joe Biden, Trump says the US “was not such a hot country” six months ago but has now become the “hottest” country.
  • The US president says his administration has garnered $10 trillion in planned investments, including the $ 1.4 trillion investment from the UAE for artificial intelligence.
  • Trump has also pivoted to US domestic issues, saying that he’s helped lower grocery prices and created “a border again” – a reference to his hardline, anti-migrant policies.
  • “I know you’ll never leave my side,” he tells Sheikh Mohammed. “I know that. And you know the special relationship that we have and our country has.”
Source: Al Jazeera
 
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