Alex1111 wrote:No but u are
Sticks and stones, sticks and stones.
Just because people do not subscribe to your point of view, which is clearly assisted by propoganda and figures that dont stand up to even the merest glance of scrutiny, throwing direct insults at people just demonstrates your juvenility, along with taking away credibility that any of your points may have.
The future of Dubai is a hotly debated one, demonstrated by the varying views on this particular thread.
Listening to all sides of the arguement and commenting as you see it, is better than reproducing government manipulated figures, as we all know which side of the arguement the government are on.
Just to throw another hat into the ring on that one.
Seeing as Dubai Government restricted the continual use of the visit visa, it was an absolute certainty that all these people working on visit visas have had to change to official reseidence visas, which gives a huge number of 'new' residence visas over a short period of time.
In addition to that, Dubai have widely touted official 'tourist' visitors to Dubai of 5-7 million per year over the last 3 years.
Think of the estimated 250,000 people that were working in Dubai, but actually living here until last autumn on a visit visa - this number effectively swelled yearly tourist figures by 2-3 million, every year. A figure which obviously helped to also demonstrate Dubai's huge 'growth' as a tourist destination.
I am just demonstrating that anyone can produce numbers. But until you look at the value of the figures they mean nothing and can be badly represented.
My personal opinion...?
Every year goes by and the figures continue to defy the drop of gravity that many predict. I think it is easy to underestimate the amount of unfinanced funds in the Dubai market, which could possibly help to hold the market up far longer than sanity or maths would normally justify.
Looking at how long it has taken for over inflated markets in the Uk, US and Spain to slowdown demonstrates just how an overvalued market can continue to overvalue even more, despite all apparent logic.
As for Dubai in 2020, at this stage, we can all really only speculate.
What will get built - what won't - there are a million factors that could influence positively or negatively.
But my final comment is look at how much space Dubai has.
Many comments have been made about Singapore and Hong Kong, but Dubai has SPACE.
When a villa at The Ranches or Green Community costs anything up to 7million with a total mass area plot of upto 10,000sqft, but has THOUSANDS of square kilometres of desert behind it, the maths on long term sustainability of value do seem a 'little' flawed, to say the least.