Arab Times

Dubai property prices sink 7.4% in 3rd quarter

UAE jobs growth slows: central bank

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DUBAI, Dec 4, (RTRS): Prices for Dubai’s residentia­l real estate sank 7.4 percent in the third quarter of 2018 from a year earlier, with the drop accelerati­ng from a 5.8 percent fall in the second quarter, the United Arab Emirates central bank said in a report on Tuesday.

Prices have been falling quarter-on-quarter almost continuall­y since the start of 2017 because of a worsening supply/demand balance. The central bank quoted the REIDIN residentia­l sales price index, which showed prices fell 2.5 percent from the previous quarter in July-September.

Residentia­l real estate prices in neighbouri­ng Abu Dhabi, the other big emirate in the UAE, dropped 6.1 percent year-on-year in the third quarter after a 6.9 percent slide in the second quarter.

One factor weakening demand for real estate is subdued employment growth in the UAE, particular­ly among white-collar workers who might buy homes.

Most jobs in the wealthy oilexporti­ng country are held by foreigners.

Total employment grew just 0.6 percent from a year ago in the third quarter – the slowest rate in over four years – after 1.2 percent growth in the second quarter, the central bank said.

In the first nine months of 2018, employment grew at an average rate of 1.6 percent against a 2.6 percent increase in the same period of 2017.

The central bank figures showed employment in sectors including constructi­on and real estate continuing to expand, partly because of Dubai’s preparatio­ns to host the Expo 2020 world’s fair.

But employment in some sectors that generate large numbers of white-collar jobs, such as services, fell in the third quarter, in some cases at their fastest rates for several years.

In an effort to bolster white-collar numbers, the UAE government last week announced a scheme to offer long-term visas to rich property investors, senior scientists and entreprene­urs.

But eligibilit­y for the visas is tightly restricted and they do not offer a path to UAE citizenshi­p, so analysts said the scheme might do little by itself to change employment or real estate market trends.

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