The Guardian Australia

UAE cuts working week and shifts weekend back a day

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The United Arab Emirates is cutting its working week to four-and-a-half days and moving its weekend from FridaySatu­rday to Saturday-Sunday in a major shift aimed at improving the country’s competitiv­eness, officials have said.

The “national working week” will be mandatory for government bodies from 1 January and bucks the regional norm of a full day-off on Friday for Muslim prayers.

While becoming the only Gulf state not to have a Friday-Saturday weekend, the move will bring the resource-rich and ambitious UAE into line with the non-Arab world.

Under the new timetable, the public sector weekend starts at noon on Fridays and ends on Sunday. Friday prayers at mosques will be held after 1.15pm all year round.

The move is intended to “better align the UAE with global markets”, said the state news agency WAM, calling the new working week the shortest in the world.

“The UAE is the first nation in the world to introduce a national working week shorter than the global five-day week,” it said.

The western-style weekend, rumoured for years, was announced less than a week after the former British protectora­te celebrated the 50th anniversar­y of its formation.

The UAE observed a Thursday-Friday weekend until 2006, when it moved to Fridays and Saturdays with the private sector following suit.

“The extended weekend comes as part of the UAE government’s efforts to boost work-life balance and enhance social wellbeing, while increasing performanc­e to advance the UAE’s economic competitiv­eness,” the WAM report said.

“From an economic perspectiv­e, the new working week will better align the UAE with global markets, reflecting the country’s strategic status on the global economic map.

“It will ensure smooth financial, trade and economic transactio­ns with countries that follow a Saturday-Sunday weekend, facilitati­ng stronger internatio­nal business links and opportunit­ies for thousands of UAE-based and multinatio­nal companies.”

The new arrangemen­t is another bold step for the UAE, which last year bucked decades of Arab consensus by normalisin­g relations with Israel, unlocking hundreds of millions of dollars in deals.

 ?? Photograph: Karim Sahib/AFP/Getty Images ?? Constructi­on workers in Dubai. Moving to a Saturday-Sunday weekend will bring the UAE into line with most of the non-Arab world.
Photograph: Karim Sahib/AFP/Getty Images Constructi­on workers in Dubai. Moving to a Saturday-Sunday weekend will bring the UAE into line with most of the non-Arab world.

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