http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/the-newspaper/columnists/mahir-ali-dubai-that-sinking-feeling


Dubai: that sinking feeling 
By Mahir Ali 
Wednesday, 02 Dec, 2009 


 
Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashed al-Maktoum (C), vice president and prime 
minister of the United Arab Emirates, briefing the press in the Gulf emirate of 
Dubai on December 1, 2009. - Photo by AFP. 
The usual clichés about castles in the sand have been trotted out once more 
following last week's request to its creditors by the state-owned conglomerate 
Dubai World that the repayment of its debts be deferred for six months. 

The magnitude of the problem was illustrated by the manner in which stock 
markets right across the developed world dipped sharply at the prospect of 
Dubai defaulting on its loans, prompting fears that global capitalism's current 
crisis could intensify after several months of gradual recovery. 

Given that Dubai has long been run virtually as a corporate entity, comparisons 
between the Gulf emirate and the now deceased American investment bank Lehman 
Brothers are not entirely facetious. There was some surprise when the US 
government decided not to rescue Lehman Brothers after it declared bankruptcy 
last year. In Dubai's case, it seems the role of potential saviour falls to Abu 
Dhabi, the dominant constituent of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and the only 
one to boast substantial oil wealth. 

The global financial crunch hadn't thus far been particularly unkind to Abu 
Dhabi, whose streets and car parks are reportedly filled with vehicles sporting 
Dubai number plates: it has become a source of jobs for many of those who lost 
theirs in the neighbouring emirate. However, although it has extended some 
valuable help, most recently in the shape of guarantees of extended liquidity 
for banks operating in the UAE, Abu Dhabi is clearly unwilling to take on all 
of Dubai's liabilities. 

This isn't altogether surprising, given the level of Dubai's debt: officially 
in the region of $80bn (of which nearly three-fourths is owed by Dubai World), 
but anecdotally at least twice as much. Dubai's reputation as a prime 
21st-century boom town was based, in other words, on borrowed funds. It has 
lavishly been spending money it didn't have, and the level of imprudence 
effectively means it has been living on borrowed time. 

Its relations with Abu Dhabi, meanwhile, have long been subliminally fraught, 
notwithstanding overt displays of fraternal warmth. Historically, Dubai split 
from Abu Dhabi in the early 19th century and the two emirates clashed 
periodically until the 1940s. Since the UAE was founded 38 years ago, the 
federation's two largest components have shared power, albeit unequally. 

The country's constitution implied that the ruler (that is, the head of the 
dominant clan, rather than the 12-inch variety) of each of its seven emirates 
would be federal president by turn. However, the post has never been held by 
anyone other than the ruler of Abu Dhabi, with his Dubai counterpart filling 
the prime ministerial slot. Marital ties between the Al Nahyans of Abu Dhabi 
and Dubai's Al Maktoums have ostensibly brought them closer, but a not 
altogether friendly rivalry has consistently simmered beneath the surface. 

Not surprisingly, therefore, at least some of the schadenfreude occasioned by 
Dubai's discomfiture probably originates in Abu Dhabi. But a candid reminder 
that Abu Dhabi's reputation is closely linked to Dubai's fortunes came when UAE 
markets reopened on Monday after the Eid holiday, and Abu Dhabi stocks took a 
bigger dive than Dubai's. 

It's conceivable that some sort of gesture will be made today in the context of 
the UAE's national day celebrations, but the near-consensus is that if Abu 
Dhabi does belatedly opt to save Dubai from the ignominy of bankruptcy, it will 
demand its pound of flesh, possibly in the shape of a particularly coveted 
asset such as Emirates, Dubai's 'national' airline. 

Chances are it was speculation along such lines that prompted Dubai's ruler 
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum to explode last month at a conference 
convened by an American bank. 'I tell those who speak about Abu Dhabi and Dubai 
as two separate states or emirates running in two different directions to shut 
up their mouth and not speak of something that is against the reality 
completely,' he declared, switching to English for the purposes of the 
uncharacteristic outburst. 

The sheikh is rattled because it's primarily his own vision - his apparent 
inability to distinguish between success and excess - that has come undone. The 
horse-lover who gained an entry decades ago in The Guinness Book of World 
Records as the groom in the most expensive wedding ever staged has consistently 
shown signs of vaulting ambition. 

This vision has sometimes resembled competitiveness of the 'mine's bigger than 
yours' variety: the world's tallest building, the largest airport, the most 
extravagant artificial islands off the coast of Jumeirah, so on and so forth. 

Dubai has little oil and its riches have always been based on its status as an 
entrepôt. The sheikh decided to throw to the winds the caution exercised by his 
father and elder brother, and pulled out all stops in positing the emirate as a 
highly desirable piece of real estate and a luxury tourist destination to boot. 
The gamble initially seemed to pay off but turned into a bad bet on a colossal 
scale. 

Over the decades, Dubai's reputation as a relatively liberal Middle Eastern 
oasis has been marred by the extraordinary degree to which manual labourers 
from South Asia have been exploited in the pursuit of greed. Unfortunately, the 
comeuppance entailed by Dubai's embrace of the crassest form of capitalism 
isn't exactly poetic justice, given that those who suffered most in 
facilitating the boom have also borne the brunt of the bust. 

The consequences of hubris of Dubaian dimensions was highlighted long ago by 
Percy Bysshe Shelley in a sonnet titled Ozymandias, in which all that remains 
of a once mighty Middle Eastern kingdom is a fallen statue whose pedestal bears 
the words: 'Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!' The poet continues: 
'Nothing beside remains. Round the decay/ Of that colossal wreck, boundless and 
bare/ The lone and level sands stretch far away.' 

It may not come to that for Dubai, but there are thus far no signs of 
contrition, let alone the realisation that, as the old truism has it, the 
higher the top the longer the drop.

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