Wednesday, 22 May 2013  -  12 Rajab 1434 H
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Dubai may ease curbs for foreign investors

Last updated: Monday, January 28, 2013 1:52 PM

 


DUBAI — Seeking to attract more investment, Dubai may let citizens from five other Gulf Arab countries establish businesses along with foreign partners but without having to include domestic investors.

The Department of Economic Development has formed a committee to study applications from nationals of the Gulf Cooperation Council and will evaluate them based on how valuable the projects are to Dubai’s economy, the department said in a statement seen Sunday.

Currently foreign investors in Dubai and the larger UAE can hold only minority stakes in companies and must have a local partner, except for so-called “free zones” where 100 percent foreign ownership is allowed.

 

Relaxing this restriction could be an important economic reform for Dubai, giving foreign investors more flexibility to find partners from the GCC’s six nations instead of having to choose from a small pool of qualified UAE citizens.

Government officials could not be reached on Sunday to comment on the statement, and it was not clear how actively the new policy would be applied.

Dubai, recovering from a 2008-10 corporate debt crisis and property market collapse, is eager to lure more foreign capital. In one initiative announced early this month, the emirate said it would revise regulations to become a regional center for Islamic finance and other Islamic businesses.

The UAE has for years been working on legislation that would in some cases let the cabinet approve 100 percent foreign ownership in firms outside free zones.

But Economy Minister Sultan Bin Saeed Al-Mansouri told Reuters this month that the draft law still needed to be debated by the Federal National Council, an advisory panel, and the cabinet.

Foreign direct investment projects totaling $4.5 billion in capital spending were announced in Dubai during the first half of last year, up 7 percent from a year earlier, according to official data. — Reuters

 

 
   
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