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Abu Dhabi ascendant as debt spoils Dubai's "model"



By Andrew Hammond
27 November 2009 @ 07:57 am ET

DUBAI - Dubai's debt troubles have exposed the fallacy of its once much-vaunted "model" of raising shining cities in the desert with foreign residents, finance and labor.


Dubai
People relax on the first day of Eid al-Ad holiday on a beach across from Nakheel's flagship Atlantis hotel in Dubai, November 26, 2009. Dubai whose extravagant building projects have been largely put on hold since the financial crisis, has asked creditors at flagship firms Dubai World and property developer Nakheel, to delay repayment on billions of dollars of debt. (Reuters Photo / Steve Crisp)
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They have also set in train a power shift toward Abu Dhabi.

On Wednesday, Dubai's government said it will ask creditors of two of its flagship firms, Dubai World and property group Nakheel, for a debt standstill as it restructures the Dubai World group.

Questions are now being raised by investors about whether Abu Dhabi will bail out Dubai and at what price?

Though Abu Dhabi is the United Arab Emirates capital, the seat of most of its oil wealth and the largest of the seven self-governing emirates by size, it took a back seat in recent years as Dubai undertook spectacular real estate projects as a tourism and finance hub.

Dubai's population rocketed to 1.5 million, as white-collar professionals from around the world took plum jobs in a country marketed as a liberal enclave in the Gulf sun.

An army of Asian workers was hired to construct the glitzy projects, drawing accusations of slave labor from rights groups, while Dubai's own citizens dwindled to a small minority, bringing strains as cultural values mixed warily.

Since the financial crisis, the credit-driven boom has ground to a halt, many of the more affluent foreigners have left and the freewheeling emirate -- a dynastic autocracy under the Al Maktoum family -- is left with up to $80 billion in debts.

Abu Dhabi has stepped in to help, but avoided a direct bail-out of its neighbor -- but it could be drawn into more direct backing if its own prestige is affected by Dubai's woes.

"In exchange for Abu Dhabi providing cash, it wants Dubai to eliminate or reform a lot of the tangled web of competing of Dubai-based companies," Eurasia Group said on Wednesday.

"Dubai has been resistant to some of Abu Dhabi's demands, and its leaders have seen their political power and prestige dissipate in wake of the financial crisis."

The federal central bank -- effectively under Abu Dhabi control -- took up $10 billion of a $20 bond issue by Dubai government earlier this year, and this week two Abu Dhabi banks took up $5 billion.

POWER SHIFT

The fiasco is playing into Abu Dhabi's ambition to unify UAE policies, clean up the Gulf state's image and project the country as a political power in the region.

The power shift is a sensitive issue -- Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum said this month the UAE was one big family and detractors who talk of division should "shut up."

"One of the things the UAE is striving to be is a political power. It is coming of age and wants to be recognized as a regional power," said political scientist Abdul-Khaleq Abdullah.

The UAE's nuclear energy plans are one sign of the new role the U.S. ally seeks, challenging a traditional Saudi hegemony in the Gulf. The UAE in May pulled out of Gulf monetary union plans over Saudi insistence on hosting a regional central bank.

The UAE is in the final stages of gaining a nuclear power cooperation deal with Washington which will see it become the first Gulf Arab country to go down that path, leading to even closer political and economic ties with ally Washington.

"It is inevitable that having a supervised active nuclear reactor will add to the UAE's already significant clout in the region," said UAE commentator Sultan Al-Qassemi, a member of one of the UAE ruling families.

IRAN PRESSURE?

Copyright 2009 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.

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Comments
1.
Nov 27, 2009 10:48am

If the Dubai safe-haven for The Super-Wealthy collapses, where will they go to hide now? Thank goodness that the Bush Crime Family still has their Paraguay hideout. No extradition from there either.
2.
Nov 28, 2009 5:59am

Dubai is a beautiful country in the world.it is a ideal location for a long holly day.i'm very impress with Dubai's this model.i think that in future we will a very beautiful place there, http://ezinearticles.com/?Best-Anti-Wrinkle-Cream-Review---Revealed-by-Dr-Oz-on-Oprahs-Show&id=2271470

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