Gulf Today

UAE reaches its pre-pandemic level at fastest pace

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AB U DHAB I : The UAE has consolidat­ed its position as one of the quickest economies to reach its pre-pandemic levels among GCC peers, said Issam Abousleima­n, Country Director of the GCC Countries, Middle East and North Africa at the World Bank.

In an interview with the Emirates News Agency (WAM), Abousleima­n said the UAE led the world with a successful vaccinatio­n programme in 2021, as well as its monetary and fiscal stimulus packages, which resulted in UAE’S economy to reach its pre-pandemic levels fast.

“Our projection­s suggest the UAE’S economy will grow 4.7 percent in 2022 which is then expected to average 3.5 percent in the medium term. We project both fiscal and external balances to register surpluses of 4.4 percent and 13.7 percent of GDP; respective­ly, during 2022, according to the June 2022 projection­s. We are currently revising these forecasts, which will be published during our Annual Meetings in mid October,” he explained.

He highlighte­d that Expo 2020 Dubai had a significan­t impact in bolstering the recovery’s momentum. “The United Arab Emirates establishe­d itself as a major participan­t on the world stage and drew not just visitors but also economic investment­s. There was a wide range of economic impacts from the Expo; from real estate to tourism and hospitalit­y to investment­s and logistics,” he added.

According to the World Bank’s recent Govtech Maturity Index, the UAE is one of the most mature countries in citizen-centric online public services in the Middle East and North Africa region. The World Bank report based its classifica­tion on four main axes: ‘supporting core government systems’, ‘enhancing public service delivery’, ‘mainstream­ing citizen engagement’, and ‘fostering Govtech enablers’.

“Under 48 indicators, the UAE achieved a full score in 31 of them, which qualified it to be among the highest global group,” he said, adding that the Digital Emirates website provides informatio­n about digital government strategies, including the Strategy for the Fourth Industrial Revolution, Strategy for Artificial Intelligen­ce, National Innovation Strategy, and Emirates Blockchain Strategy 2021.

Abousleima­n referred that the government uses a digital government maturity model as a unified reference to assess its own digital maturity. The UAE also publishes its citizen engagement performanc­e and has a dedicated website, msurvey, that allows the public to articulate their opinions easily and to provide feedback transparen­tly on policies and various developmen­t issues. The Dubai government is expected to go completely paperless, eliminatin­g more than 1 billion pieces of paper used for government transactio­ns every year.

The Country Director of the GCC Countries, Middle East and North Africa at the World Bank also said that the GCC region is projected to expand by 5.9 percent in 2022 before moderating to 3.7 percent and 3.3 percent in 2023 and 2024, respective­ly. “These projection­s are expected to be revised upwards in our October forecast based on OPEC+ developmen­ts of raising production quotas,” he clarified.

On the other hand, and as most of the GCC population has been fully vaccinated, coupled with pandemic pressures fading away, the non-oil sectors are set to continue expanding by more than 3 percent in the medium term, he went on to explain.

Abousleima­n also pointed out that in light of the continuati­on of the US dollar peg, with the exception of Kuwait, which is pegged to a basket of currencies, central banks in the Gulf are and will be on a tighter monetary policy path following the US Federal Reserve (FED) policy outlook. The recent FED decisions to hike the policy rate were matched by GCC central banks at varying amounts.

In another context, Abousleima­n highlighte­d that the UAE was able to enact significan­t reforms in only six months during the COVID-19 crisis, which sends a powerful signal about the government’s commitment to the gender equality agenda.

“The UAE is moving to have a gender-neutral eco-system. They became the first country in MENA to introduce parental leave for fathers. The amendments to the Personal Status Law brought women freedom of movement and the right to be heads of household; new provisions in the Labor Law introduced equal pay for work of equal value and prohibited gender-based discrimina­tion in employment. The Central Bank introduced non-discrimina­tion based on gender in access to credit and the Criminal Code was amended to combat domestic violence,” he said.

These bold measures will benefit not only the Emirati women now, but generation­s to come, he said, anticipati­ng that these measures will have direct impact on women’s labour force participat­ion, entreprene­urship, and investment.

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