The National - News

Dubai could change how everyone works

▶ Remote-working scheme has the potential to make home a permanent office for many

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On Wednesday, Dubai launched a remote-working programme to encourage profession­als employed by overseas companies to relocate to the emirate. Applicants will be eligible to obtain services available to ordinary residents, including phone and internet connection, schooling for their children, 100 per cent tax exemption on their incomes and, of course, a distinctiv­e lifestyle.

The scheme has the potential to provide the local economy with an important revenue stream. But more profoundly, it could have a lasting impact on the way people choose to work and live their lives. In other words, for millions of people, where they live and work in the future could become independen­t considerat­ions.

Dubai’s scheme reflects an understand­ing of the digital push in today’s workplace – in a way forced on people and organisati­ons across sectors around the world by the onset of Covid-19. Indeed, one of the more consequent­ial ways in which the pandemic has upended people’s lives is how and where they work.

The concept of working from home is not new to millions of profession­als. But over the past several months, this idea has had to be extended to the broader working population in almost every country, in order to reduce the spread of infection. In the process, this arrangemen­t has helped to raise individual and organisati­onal efficienci­es on a much larger scale and improved work-life balance for millions – made possible, of course, by the availabili­ty of an array of technologi­es.

The remote-working scheme could essentiall­y make this arrangemen­t a permanent way of life for many. It is, however, yet to be seen whether working from home will become the norm in every profession. While the IT and banking sectors might continue this arrangemen­t, some sectors, such the creative industries, are likely to prefer having personal interactio­n and collaborat­ion within designated office spaces.

Similar programmes have been offered by a host of other countries in recent months, from Barbados to Estonia to Georgia and Croatia. But Dubai’s initiative could further cement the emirate’s status as a global business hub at a time of great change across the Mena region.

According to MAGNiTT, a data platform for the Mena investment and start-up community, $1 billion of capital could be invested in the region by the end of 2020, with Dubai potentiall­y drawing a significan­t part of that investment. It is, after all, a place where entreprene­urs and thought leaders meet and interact with one another. But Dubai is not just an ideal city to work and do business. It is also a good place for people to lead safe, secure and stable lives. Its infrastruc­ture and geographic location are the other obvious benefits.

Work is, by its very nature, at the centre of any strong economy. The pandemic has shifted that engine of growth, for many sectors, away from the office, creating a special emphasis on where one makes a home. As generation­s of residents from around the world will attest, there are few homes safer, more dynamic and more forward-looking than those provided by the UAE.

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