The National - News

Milestones celebrated as new goals are set

▶ UAE progress report hails successes while acting as a clarion call for future developmen­t

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In 1975, the UAE’s workforce numbered around 300,000; today it surpasses 6.4 million. Back then, 1,000 Emirati women worked; today that number is 135,000. In the last two decades, life expectancy has risen by six years. All this and more is revealed by the latest UAE Human Developmen­t Report, which sheds light on the rapid growth of a nation, from infancy to being a world leader in numerous fields. The fact that the wider Middle East is so riven with political instabilit­y, conflict and economic strife makes the UAE’s achievemen­ts all the greater. Its score on the human developmen­t index – calculated based on schooling, living standards and life expectancy – ranks the nation on a par with Spain, Portugal and Italy. The study by United Arab Emirates University in conjunctio­n with the UN reflects how economic growth has been matched by improvemen­ts in human developmen­t. Today the UAE is among the best providers of health and education services in the region while technology is ensuring those facilities can compete with the best in the world. Emirati children are being trained for a future in artificial intelligen­ce, space exploratio­n and the internet of things, producing a generation of tech-savvy young graduates prepared to embrace the future.

Yet while the Human Developmen­t Report is cause for celebratio­n, it also provides an opportunit­y by offering pointers on the direction the country needs to take to grasp the next stages of its developmen­t. The study notes that the strides taken by Dubai and Abu Dhabi have been greater than those in other parts of the country, particular­ly the northern emirates. As the UAE grows and matures, steps must be taken to ensure that nobody is left behind. As these pages and the report have clarified, there is a need to increase the attractive­ness of private sector jobs to citizens, particular­ly with nearly two-thirds of unemployed Emiratis under the age of 30. Meanwhile, a separate report from accountanc­y firm Pricewater­houseCoope­rs states that another 175,000 classroom places are needed by 2021 to cater for increasing demand from parents.

In the light of the report, those living in the UAE should take heart from the fact there are more opportunit­ies and privileges than ever before as the country develops in strength and stature. But the report also reveals the work that needs to be done at this juncture to take the country towards its next phase of developmen­t to build a knowledge economy not solely dependent on oil. Given the raft of recent reforms, among them the introducti­on of VAT and long-term visas, it is a clarion call to which the leaders of the UAE are already responding.

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