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Speak-out

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Anybody here follow the Market  in the paste fewday?? if so, What happening with Dubai???

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Anonymous

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Speak-out wrote:

Anybody here follow the Market  in the paste fewday?? if so, What happening with Dubai???




 Dubai is a perfect example of the moral story, "the Emperor's New Cloth," they want to be modernize like the West. They build more than the local market demand it.

Good lesson for those Lao Patikan that demand the Lao Government to build more expensive skyscrapers, like in neighboring Cambodia and Thailand, just for the sake of bragging right and not base on the local needs and demands.



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Anonymous

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Dubai still suffers from economic meltdown... major constructions halted.



The Irish Times - Wednesday, December 2, 2009


Reports of Dubai's economic demise dismissed as 'exaggerated'

LETTER FROM DUBAI: FLIGHTS TO and from Dubai are fully booked. Airport duty free is thronged with incoming and outgoing travellers shopping, which is Dubai’s national sport, writes MICHAEL JANSEN 

Lines are long at the visa counter. But most of those waiting are East Europeans, rather than Asians.

Visitors poured in for the air show and golf tournament, even though its prize money had been cut from $10 million (€6.6 million) to $7.5 million.

The World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda brought 700 experts and scholars for two days of expenses-paid talk.

Traffic jams fill the wide highways. Lights flicker on Christmas trees in well stocked supermarkets as large ladies wheel carts of loot to waiting late model cars. Shopkeepers in the “little India” districts of Karama and Bur Dubai remain steadfast; their middle-class customers are staying on. Dubai is the good life.

In spite of the veneer of normality, Dubai is a land of confusion.

Official statistics show the population grew by 1.9 per cent to 1.7 million during the second quarter of the year. Most jobless foreign workers left last spring. Officials claim the total number who departed was 50,000; locals say this figure is too low.

No one knows how many went to oil-rich Abu Dhabi or gas-exporting Qatar, or carried home contracts to return if and when Dubai’s real estate sector recovers. The property crash is the main cause of the emirate’s financial difficulties.

Overblown property prices fell by 40-50 per cent since the slide began in November last year, and are expected to dip by another 20 per cent.

Rents are plunging in new luxury neighbourhoods. Canny foreigners come looking for bargains.

Expats who have lost high-paying public sector jobs are consulting, teaching and freelancing. One businessman, who launched his own consultancy, observed: “We know how to manage when times are difficult. We are flexible. We spend less and wait to see what will happen.” A friend who arranges barter deals says business is brisk.

Nevertheless, Dubai is in waiting mode.

Cranes hover over scores of unfinished buildings. Road works and other infrastructure projects are on hold.

A source at Dubai World, responsible for $59 billion of Dubai’s $84 billion debt, says the state-owned conglomerate is “restructuring”.

At least 12,000 of its 70,000 employees have been sacked. That figure could be as high as 20,000. There will be more job losses during 2010.

Dr Abdel Khaleq Abdullah, a leading Emirati commentator, dismisses reports of Dubai’s economic demise as “exaggerated”. Dubai no longer enjoys a growth rate of 14 per cent, but most countries would be delighted with its 5 per cent, he argues. The slump “was not a knock out. The business model is going through tough times, but this will not last for too long.”

The model is viable and resilient, as the experience of Singapore shows.

The government’s announcement that it will not bail out Dubai World could put recovery off for months.

But the authorities in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, the senior member of the seven-emirate federation, cannot afford to allow the conglomerate to sink.

Meanwhile, Dubai remains the Gulf’s shining city.

At nine minutes past nine on the morning of September 9th, 2009, Dubai inaugurated its modern metro, the answer to traffic snarls.

On January 4th, 2010, on the anniversary of the assumption of rule by Shaikh Muhammad bin Rashid al-Maktoum, the world’s tallest building, Bourj Dubai, is set to open.

The handiwork of Indian labourers, Bourj Dubai is 800 metres tall, has 160 floors and contains offices, shops, restaurants and 30,000 homes.

The Bourj, or tower, is a slender, tapering silver structure, dubbed the “Almighty Needle” by Australian writer Germaine Greer during a recent visit.

It looms over elegant two- and three-storey cream-coloured blocks built in traditional Arab style and the squat bulk of the Dubai Mall, the world’s largest shopping centre.

Next door, at Souq al-Bahr (Market of the Sea), a handsome mall modelled on ancient Arab markets, customers lunch on continental cuisine in restaurants beside a pool featuring fountains which fire water high into the air with the sharp crack of a pistol shot or the flat thump of a mortar.

Dubai is down, but fighting for its place in the sun.



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Senior Member

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They borrowed more than they could leverage it. This is an example of greed and easy money lending. This is also why it is hard for me to borrow money from banks too because they are not willing like they used to.

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Anonymous wrote:

Speak-out wrote:

Anybody here follow the Market  in the paste fewday?? if so, What happening with Dubai???




 Dubai is a perfect example of the moral story, "the Emperor's New Cloth," they want to be modernize like the West. They build more than the local market demand it.

Good lesson for those Lao Patikan that demand the Lao Government to build more expensive skyscrapers, like in neighboring Cambodia and Thailand, just for the sake of bragging right and not base on the local needs and demands.



I normally would not pay attention to this kind of  comments but,

It's easy to hide behide the mask and said things like these.

who are the Lao Patikan to you? where are the facts that Lao Patikan demanding that Lao Gov to do such?

if, in your head still have the word Patikan you will not be able to move forward.

WE ARE LAO! REGARDLESS OF WHERE WE LIVE....PEACE!

 



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Guru

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Speak-out wrote:

Anybody here follow the Market  in the paste fewday?? if so, What happening with Dubai???




short of cash bro.... just like anywhere else in the world.  with this global downward economy, even Dubai will feel the pain.  only country that claim no effect what so ever with global economy is Laos. hahahhahahah  they claim everything is just fine and dandy..  all you can do is laugh out loud.



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Anonymous

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This is so annoying the web Mst kept deleting me DAMN IT!!!!furious

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Anonymous

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Anonymous wrote:

This is so annoying the web Mst kept deleting me DAMN IT!!!!furious



Sometime i agree when he delete some posts but he become unreasoned person lately. He is disrespectful. It is more than annoying.

 



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Anonymous

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yeah, we can not follow thailand or cambodia, because our development level can not do so, we still need many more years, or it will be like dubai



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Anonymous

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Anonymous wrote:

This is so annoying the web Mst kept deleting me DAMN IT!!!!furious



I read your comments I enjoyed everything you have to say " because i have done all of it"
 its so true and that is why he deleted it. he also delete my comments. go figured.

 Nangdarling



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Guru

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