"The most obvious long-term effect of the financial crisis is a shift in economic decision-making power from capitals of finance to capitals of politics. We see this trend in the United States, where decisions on how best to value assets and allocate capital are now made in Washington on a scale unthinkable until about this time last year. Outside the United States, nowhere is this development more obvious than in the United Arab Emirates, where power and wealth have shifted at startling speed from Dubai to Abu Dhabi (the seat of political power). But the American trend is temporary; the UAE's might not be......
Faced with that, Dubai announced a $20 billion bond program to raise the needed cash. In February 2009, Abu Dhabi moved in with $10 billion bailout, underwritten by the UAE's central bank. So far, Dubai has yet to find the other $10 billion, and Abu Dhabi may have to step in again. But the bursting of Dubai's real estate bubble and the sudden collapse of its economy have already allowed Abu Dhabi's ruling al Nahayan family to buy a big share of the al Maktoum's assets.....
There's plenty of reason to fear that things won't get better soon. ....overbuilding on many projects continues because the state controls many of the emirate's largest construction companies.....leaving the emirate with large amounts of unused commercial space. .....
..... there's another cloud on the horizon. If the United States moves to intensify sanctions on Iran next year (a good bet given the low likelihood that the current diplomatic optimism will last), Dubai will be vulnerable. Much of Iran's financial flows move through Dubai, and sanctions would hit the emirate especially hard."
"'America is something that can be easily moved. Moved to the right direction.They won’t get in our way'" Benjamin Netanyahu
Friday, November 6, 2009
"Dubai’s troubles have just begun"
The Eurasia-CALL, here
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