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Dubai is one of the seven emirates
that make up the United Arab Emirates on the Arabian
Peninsula. Dubai is the second largest emirate
in the federation after Abu Dhabi and its main
city, Dubai “city”, is the largest city in the
UAE. The Population of the UAE is approximately
3.7 million with Dubai carrying a population of
1.7 million. Dubai has become an important tourist
destination and is diversifying as an important
hub for service based industries. The government
has set up enclaves for industry specific corporations
and continues to be proactive in developing an
infrastructure to attract foreign investment and
business.
Dubai is the third most important
re-export center
in the world (after Hong Kong and Singapore) and
is diversifying as an important hub for service
based industries. Dubai presents international
businesses with a wide range of opportunities
for different activities and operations.
The incentives
of setting up business in Dubai include a free
enterprise system, no corporate or personal taxes
on income or capital, no foreign exchange controls
and a stable, freely convertible currency, sophisticated
services sector, air links to over 130 destinations
worldwide via some 90 airlines, leading center
for tourism and leisure activities in the Middle
East and a cosmopolitan lifestyle, tolerant, and
virtually crime-free environment.
Although the wealth of the UAE
as whole is based on the oil and gas output (about
33% of GDP), most of the oil is situated in the
Emirate of Abu Dhabi. In recognition of this fact,
Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum,
Crown Prince of Dubai and UAE Defense Minister,
has focused on development of the non-oil sector
in Dubai. Economic growth in the non-oil sector
reached 8.4% in 2000.
One of the greatest achievements
in Dubai was the establishment of the Jebel
Ali Port and the Jebel Ali Free
Zone. More than 3800 companies operate
at the Jebel Ali complex in Dubai, which includes
a deep-water port and a free trade zone for manufacturing
and distribution in which all goods for re-export
or transshipment enjoy a 100% duty exemption.
A major power plant with associated water desalination
units, an aluminum smelter, and a steel fabrication
unit are prominent facilities in the complex.
Except in the free trade zone, the UAE requires
at least 51% local citizen ownership in all businesses
operating in the country.
The information industry in
particular has been lavishly courted by Dubai.
In 2000, Dubai Internet City
opened at a cost of $250m. This is a zone of tax-free
trading based on the Jebel Ali Free Zone model,
designed to appeal to large information technology
companies and “knowledge professionals” from around
the world. The list of tenants includes Dell,
Siemens, HP, Microsoft, Oracle and Cisco Systems.
For media companies there is the adjacent Dubai
Media City, opened in 2001, and now home
to CNN, MBC, Reuters and Dow Jones, among others.
Sheikh Mohammed, often referred
to as the emirate's chief executive, has dedicated
himself to turning Dubai into a business, tourism
and aviation hub. He hopes to attract 15m visitors
a year to Dubai by 2010. The annual Dubai
Shopping Festival (DSF), launched in
1995, now fills hotels to 100% capacity and can
generate extra sales of up to $1.5 billion and
draws shoppers from Europe, Asia and from and
around the region. Other, smaller shopping festivals
such as Dubai Summer Surprises
are held throughout the year. The city has many
malls such as City Centre, Bur Juman, Mercato,
Lamcy Plaza, Al Ghurair Centre and Wafi Centre
that house international stores, theaters, gaming
arcades and food courts. Currently under development
is an entertainment complex called Dubailand,
the Palm Island and Burj
Dubai, the tallest building in the World.
Dubailand includes a theme park and the Mall of
Arabia, which will be the largest shopping mall
in the world. Dubailand is slated to open in 2006.
Dubai is also home to the Dubai World
Cup, the world's richest horse race,
held every March. The Burj Al Arab, a luxury hotel
built on an artificial island and the second tallest
hotel in the world, has become an instant symbol
of the city.
Other projects in the works include
the Dubai Marina, a $10 billion
housing development; a $1.6 billion Festival
City; a $150m zoo, as well as the recreation
of “Old Dubai”. The most ambitious project, however,
is the Dubai International Financial Centre,
which aims to turn Dubai into the leading capital
market in the Middle East.
Emirates Airlines,
the Dubai-based airline, launched in 1985, is
equally ambitious. It has turned a profit every
year since it began in 1985; in 2003, its net
profits climbed to $428m, carrying 23% more passengers
than in 2002. In 2003 they were the world's biggest
buyer of aircraft, spending $19 billion on Airbus
and Boeing jets. In June 2004 Emirates commenced
non-stop service to New York, soon to be followed
by Chicago and San Francisco. The airline has
always welcomed competition—100 airlines now link
Dubai to 145 destinations—and in the early 1990s
persuaded hoteliers to offer cheap rates for short
stays, luring long-haul fliers to rest for a couple
of days, rather than just changing planes.
The government's vision to diversify
from a trade based, but oil reliant economy to
one that is service and tourism oriented, has
been conducive to the growth of real estate corporations
such as Emaar properties and Jumeirah International.
Corporate office enclaves on Sheikh Zayed road
were developed to shift Dubai's traditional business
area from the creek to the western parts of the
city. Modern Dubai, with its glass skyscrapers,
lavish hotels and 21st-century business ambitions,
seems a far cry from the city that existed even
30 years ago. Today, much of Dubai’s trade comes
from multinationals. But Dubai has been a regional
trading hub since the 16th century.
A trip to downtown Deira, by
the mouth of the creek, provides first-hand evidence
of modern Dubai’s links with its past. The thriving
Gold Souk, now a busy tourist attraction
and the throng of traditional wooden dhow ships
moored on the banks of the creek, still ferrying
goods between Dubai and Iran or Sudan, harks back
to Dubai’s roots as a humble trading post. No
one can question the advances made by Dubai in
recent decades; the architectural evidence is
everywhere.
Until recently, real
estate in Dubai could only be owned by
UAE nationals and to a lesser extent, by nationals
of other Gulf Cooperative Council (“GCC”) countries.
However, numerous new real estate development
projects now allow expatriates to own property
on a “free hold” basis.
The official language is Arabic,
but English, Hindi, Urdu and Malayalam are widely
spoken. Islam is the only officially recognized
religion. A vast majority of the people are Sunnis.
There are foreign minority Hindus and Christians
as well.
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