Khaleej Times

DIVERSIFIC­ATION OILS UAE GROWTH

- Waheed Abbas

ɡƝɟɞɦ — The UAE’s real GDP is projected to grow at a strong rate, driven by infrastruc­ture spending and economic diversiƈca­tion with non-oil sectors contributi­on rising to nearly 9ǜ per cent y ǞǜǞǡ, according to a Frost & Sullivan’s research report.

The UAE will pump in huge funds in the developmen­t of oilƈeld projects, Expo ǞǜǞǜ projects and other mega projects related to tourism and retail sectors. In addition, removal of sanctions on Iran will also beneƈt the UAE from increased trade, said Malabika Mandal, senior research analyst — visionary innovation group at Frost & Sullivan.

“The average growth of the UAE GDP ǵnominal GDPǶ by ǞǜǞǡ would be ǡǒǢ-ǡǒ9 per cent and real GDP growth is expected to be ǠǒǢ-ǡǒǝ per cent by ǞǜǞǡ. The infrastruc­ture investment and economic diversiƈca­tion would be the main drivers for the economic growth in UAE. Oil production in UAE is expected to rise due to investment­s in oilƈeld developmen­t.”

Hospitalit­y revenue in the UAE is forecast to increase by 10.8 per cent annually from last year to $9.8 billion by 2020 MR Raghu, MD of Marmore Mena Intelligen­ce

The UAE has continuous­ly been investing on infrastruc­ture making it one of the most connected countries in the world Avin Gidwani, CEO, BNC Network

As Dubai is hosting Expo 2020, she said the mega projects coming up will enhance the retail and tourism sector of the region.

“The lifting of sanctions on Iran will render increased trade. Fiscal and external balances are expected to recover over the medium term; with a reversal of the fiscal deficit expected and recoil in the current account surplus to 3.2 per cent of GDP by 2018.”

Post the announceme­nt of Expo 2020 event, Dubai is a wave of opportunit­y with government setting aside Dh17 billion in 2016 budget for infrastruc­ture developmen­t till 2020.

“The investment will be spread over different asset classes broadly covering housing, roads, railways, schools, health facilities and public buildings. Abu Dhabi is also soon becoming a hot destinatio­n for investors eyeing long-term growth. The emirate has earmarked $100 billion to be invested till 2030 and majority of it will be ploughed in the real estate and transporta­tion sector,” Mandal noted.

The IMF earlier this month projected the UAE’s 1.3 per cent real GDP growth for 2017 and 3.4 per cent for the next year.

“The UAE has continuous­ly been investing on infrastruc­ture, making it one of the most connected countries in the world — be it air, sea or land. This unique selling point makes the country extremely attractive for investment, businesses and tourism,” said Avin Gidwani, CEO, BNC Network.

Sector contributi­ons

Mandal projected that the non-oil sectors are expected to account for nearly 90 per cent of the UAE’s economy by 2025, with the highest contributi­on from manufactur­ing, followed by aviation and logistics.

Among the non-oil sectors, it is expected that manufactur­ing will contribute the highest with 21 per cent by 2025, followed by aviation at 16 per cent and logistics at 15 per cent. Sectors like real estate and constructi­on, finance and tourism will each contribute 11 per cent by 2025. Other sectors like education, media and healthcare will contribute around five per cent to the UAE economy by 2025.

According to the Frost & Sullivan study, the UAE, which leads the Middle East when it comes to the maturity of the Internet economy, is expected to hold this position through the next 10 years, with Internet contributi­ng nearly 5.4 per cent of the UAE economy — up from 4.2 per cent in 2016.

Earlier, the IMF had projected non-oil growth to rise from 2.7 per cent in 2016 to 3.3 per cent and 3.4 per cent in 2017 and 2018 respective­ly, reflecting increased domestic public investment and a pickup in global trade. Over the medium term, non-oil growth is expected to stay above three per cent, supported by accelerati­ng investment in the run-up to Expo 2020.

Commenting on the non-oil sectors that will drive the economy, M.R. Raghu, managing director of Marmore Mena Intelligen­ce,

Fiscal and external balances are expected to recover over the medium term Malabika Mandal, senior research analyst, Frost & Sullivan

said hospitalit­y, constructi­on, logistics, real estate and services will lead the diversific­ation of economy.

“Hospitalit­y revenue in the UAE is forecast to increase by 10.8 per cent annually from last year to $9.8 billion by 2020, thanks to a steady growth in internatio­nal tourists at 7 per cent per annum, and the opening of new attraction­s such as theme parks, are expected to drive this increase,” he said.

The UAE’s constructi­on industry is poised to witness strong growth in coming years as more than $34.6 billion (Dh127 billion) worth of urban, industrial, transport, utilities and oil and gas projects are in the pipeline.

The UAE logistics sector is expected to grow by 4 per cent in 2016, with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5.7 per cent between 2015 and 2020. The key drivers of the industry are Expo 2020, national logistics developmen­t plans and trade with Asia and Sub-Saharan African countries.

Though, according to NBC Network’s Gidwani, hydrocarbo­n represents a third of the UAE economy but the UAE’s growth will be dominated by the service sectors — aviation, tourism, real estate, constructi­on, transport and logistics sectors. All sectors are expected to grow; however hospitalit­y, healthcare, education and transporta­tion will lead growth in the region.

As per the BNC Project Intelligen­ce, the UAE is expected to spend over $5.5 billion in the infrastruc­ture projects which include rail, road, marine and other infrastruc­ture developmen­t works. Some of the important projects fuelling this growth in the infrastruc­ture sector are Dubai Metro Red Line Extension, Expo 2020 worth $2.9 billion, Container Terminal 4 at Jebel Ali Port Expansion worth $1.6 billion and Passenger Terminal Building and expansion of Al Maktoum Internatio­nal Airport — phase 1 worth $1.5 billion.

VAT contributi­on

Mandal said the UAE would progress in economic diversific­ation through increase in the non-oil tax revenue collection­s in order to reduce oil dependency and meet the priority spending needs.

The UAE is expected to implement a GCC-wide value-added tax (VAT) by 2018, and is considerin­g increasing excise taxes and introducin­g corporate tax. Key investment areas will be sustained in the next decade, as obvious by the recently announced nuclear energy project.

“The GCC countries’ non-oil tax revenue collection­s are low when compared to other emerging oil exporter economies and low-income countries. The nonoil tax revenue covers less than 5 per cent on average of government expenditur­es in the GCC countries, whereas it covers more than 40 per cent in countries like Mexico and Kazakhstan and more than 20 per cent in Algeria, Angola and Nigeria,” she added.

“GCC countries need to increase non-oil revenues to reduce oil dependency and meet priority spending needs. The UAE is expected to implement a GCC-wide value added tax by 2018. This will benefit the UAE economy. It is expected that within one year of implementa­tion of VAT, it will contribute around 1.4 per cent of the economy,” she concluded.

— waheedabba­s@khaleejtim­es.com

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