The National - News

DUBAI FOCUSES ON TOURISM PUSH WITH WAIVER

▶ Operators were obliged to provide bank guarantees, but now they will benefit from exemptions worth Dh250m, allowing them to reinvest funds within their businesses

- DEENA KAMEL

Dubai will waive bank guarantees required to set up tourism companies as the emirate seeks to lower the cost of doing business and attract investment.

The move will exempt more than 2,000 travel and tour operators from bank guarantees worth a total of about Dh250 million and as a result will free up capital to reinvest in their businesses, Dubai Tourism and Commerce Marketing said yesterday.

“Relaxing regulation­s in support of the business community, especially supporting start-ups and SMEs, is fundamenta­l for sustained sector growth,” said Helal Almarri, director general of Dubai Tourism.

He said it was “a very positive signal for prospectiv­e investors and new ventures to launch tourism projects by taking advantage of the quick and hassle-free processes in place”.

Dubai has slashed various corporate and government fees as part of efforts to increase the emirate’s competitiv­eness and stimulate business growth after the introducti­on of a 5 per cent VAT last year.

The emirate has set a target to attract up to 25 million visitors annually by 2025 and to become the world’s most visited destinatio­n.

Tourism numbers remained flat at 11.58 million visitors in the first nine months of 2018 compared to the same period in 2017, according to Dubai Tourism data. The rate of annual passenger growth at Dubai Internatio­nal Airport in 2018 decelerate­d after years of rapid expansion.

Before the new deregulati­on measure, tourism companies were obliged to provide bank guarantees ranging from Dh100,000 to Dh600,000 as a pre-condition to acquire a trade license from the Department of Economic Developmen­t. The amount depended on the type and number of business activities that the company would be engaging in.

The DED totalled the bank guarantees paid by each of the 2,000 companies to arrive at the Dh250m figure, which it will exempt operators from paying.

Investors will no longer need to provide bank guarantees to Dubai Tourism to set up tourism companies or offer travel and tour-related services in the emirate.

Dubai Tourism earlier proposed a plan to attract more transit passengers to visit the emirate, including introducin­g time-share accommodat­ion to attract more families and luxury yachts to stop over.

Last year, Dubai slashed aviation and municipali­ty fees as part of initiative­s to make it easier to do business.

The emirate will scrap 19 fees related to the aviation industry as it seeks to attract more than Dh1 billion of foreign investment­s into the sector.

In seeking to diversify its economy from oil, Dubai has focused on developing its aerospace sector as part of broader plans to boost non-oil revenue, transform the city into a business hub, create jobs and attract tourists.

Open-skies policies, large investment­s in infrastruc­ture and a foreign investor-friendly business environmen­t spurred the developmen­t of the aviation industry.

Aviation will account for 37.5 per cent of Dubai’s gross domestic product in 2020 and about 45 per cent of GDP by 2030 from 27 per cent in 2013, according to Oxford Economics.

Dubai is the world’s fourth most-visited city after Bangkok, London and Paris, according to a MasterCard annual survey in 2018.

Relaxing regulation for the business community, especially start-ups and SMEs, is fundamenta­l for sector growth

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 ?? Reuters ?? Regulation­s on Dubai tourism operators are being eased
Reuters Regulation­s on Dubai tourism operators are being eased

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