I actually started typing this out in response to a thread “feel good factors vs. feel bad factors” in the Expat Help Forum after I had got about halfway through I realised that well, this is cathartic (if perhaps incoherent at times) in a way and helps to get quiet a lot of “issues” off my chest before I leave.
Due to the topical nature I decided it should rather go into General Chat than Help Forum, as some of my opinions while I think are carefully worded may offend others and I would hate for all forum members to wake up tomorrow with a big “Etisalat – censored” sign where their favourite forum used to be – mod’s if it needs to move, then move it or remove it!
Like I said, these are my views and opinions you don’t have to agree or disagree; personally I’d like to hear other people’s views on the topic(s) as well.
Dubai : Feel Good Factors vs Feel Bad Factors
I’ve been pondering that question for the past 9 months now, and it is partly responsible for the reason I’m leaving Dubai. Over the past year I’ve felt this "undercurrent" for want of a better word, the exact source and nature of the problem still eludes me - possibly a combination of things? Anyway here is my list (for what its worth):
Over the past years I’ve found the following - while costs have generally increased across the entire spectrum of services provided in Dubai - salary packages and the associated benefits have actually been reduced. I suppose this is natural for big/ large business to tighten their belts, but what they have failed to recognise is that there is an increase in the cost of living for "Joe Public". The segment of the population who this mainly affects can be categorised as "middle class Dubai".
To be frank, it doesn't really affect those in the "mega-wealthy" bracket, or the poor sods who have to work outside in the blazing sun as their very basic requirements have not changed over the last 20 years and are still largely provided for by the employers.
Dubai falls very short in providing decent, cost effective housing for its "middle class". Rentals have increased astronomically over the past few years - possibly in reaction to the fact that expatriates can now own their own property. This seems paradoxical, as if you were forced into a position where your rent went up by so much it would actually make it more affordable to buy your own villa/ apartment - additionally when you leave Dubai you get to sell the property and take some of your hard earned cash with you rather than leaving it in the pocket of a landlord. One would have expected landlords to actually drop the rentals to try and keep their buildings occupied!
Speculation is rife in the property market, while it is a free market and I don’t begrudge anyone from making some money off a good investment, the local market has hundreds if not thousands of extremely wealthy people who can afford to buy up 10 or 20 properties at 2 million dollars each so that they can turn a quick buck. In theory this is all good and well, but you can only really stay in one villa at a time, so the obvious thing to do is rent out the others (or sell them on at a profit if you are able to do so). As this is an investment you expect a good return on it, so the rental of the property has to out perform the cost of finance or return a higher rate than if you had simply invested it. Again we come back to “Joe Public” who now has to either fork out more in rental or find alternative accommodations. Quiet simply the local property developers don’t develop properties for the middle class, and if they did and restrictions weren’t placed on the market, you could expect these to also be snapped up in batches of 20 at a time and the cycle would repeat itself.
“Money laundering” through the property market seems to be quiet in fashion, in a society such as Dubai where large sums of hard cash are exchanged without batting and eyelid; it seems to be very easy and lucrative for a person wanting to clean some cash to invest in property. Instead of getting a few cents on a dollar it is actually possible to do clean up the cash and turn a profit at the same time – artificially inflating the property values.
What the “powers that be” fail to recognise is that most of the actual hands on physical work in Dubai is being done by lower and middle classes; high powered executives don’t get their hands dirty they have managers and labour that do it for them. As I see it, the closer and tighter the draw strings are pulled around the purse and the more expensive it becomes to live in Dubai the fewer qualified “management” and labour will make the journey to Dubai and more and more of them will be forced to leave simply because they can’t afford to stay here anymore.
This could have two outcomes, less qualified and cheaper expatriates will be drawn to the area where they can still eek out a meagre existence (staying in labour accommodation for instance) – consequently resulting in the drop of service, maintenance, building and trading standards as well as productivity levels. Or the “middle management/ middle class” will virtually cease to exist in Dubai leaving only the two extremes – labour and executives.
Business/ “the powers that be” seem to forget that Dubai is based largely on an expatriate population who originally come to earn money in a tax free environment, at a decent exchange rate with the sole purpose of repatriating their money and build a better life for themselves in their country of birth. Personally I didn’t come to Dubai for the pristine and unspoilt environment, scenic country drives, long walks in the mountains, crisp, clear air, tropical rain showers and butterflies (for those of you who haven’t yet visited, I’m being sarcastic); I came here to earn money! I now feel that I work just as hard, if not harder as I did when I arrived and have less and lees every year to show for it. There may not be tax (yet) in Dubai, but there are a million ways to make you part with your money.
Double standards in the application of the laws, again to be frank, this exists, one only has to read a selection of the weeks newspapers to confirm this!
Traffic problems, one of the most ludicrous situations I have ever encountered, people (even the government and municipality) are continually complaining about the poor standards of driving as well as the high number of serious and fatal road accidents etc. What course of action is taken to reduce this?
• Install more speed cameras (as these generate more money)
• Don’t empower the traffic police deal strictly and decisively with offenders (see double standards of the law). I constantly see expatriate policemen berated, threatened with deportation or being reported to their superiors etc. by the people they are trying to protect – purely because they are the cousin of someone important
• Have a speed limit of 120km per hour on the roads and then set all the speed cameras to a threshold of 130km per hour and publicise the fact!
• Impose a fine of 500AED (for the first offence) for running a red light, this far too little and of no help if the person concern has killed themselves (and perhaps others) in the process. An offence like this should result in the 2 year suspension of offender’s license and seizure of the vehicle by the state.
• The fine system should be linked or proportionate to the income of the offender! If a person is driving a 500,000AED vehicle they are hardly going to feel the pinch of a 200AED fine for driving over the speed limit.
Unscrupulous labour brokers and employers; again open any newspaper on any given day and see how “labourers” are treated. How can the “system” overlook such unjust behaviour by big business? Is it because they are “big business” that they can get away with practices which border on slavery? I have an interest in the Labour Forum so am always on the look out for articles of interest. This is a typical example of the type of thing I mean. In Sharjah about a year ago, a group of Sri Lankan women employed in a textile factory laid a complaint and eventually went to the newspaper as they had not been paid in about 8 months; after the case was investigated they were all paid a small fee by the employer and deported. They then changed the law so that Sri Lankan’s can no longer be employed in the garment industry in Sharjah as … here comes the punch-line “they get taken advantage of” – I rest my case.
Dubai is a very "copycat" type of society, if someone hits on a winning formula within a few months there are twenty people copying the idea (with varying degrees of success), ultimately diluting and destroying the market! I’ve seen plenty of brilliant ideas squashed by big business men with more money than the original entrepreneur simply out for a quick buck – sadly the restraints and controls that one may have in the “west” to curtail this type of behaviour are lacking.
Over the past months I have noted a very subtle change in Dubai with regards to material wealth, people and businesses seem to be more and more focused of making money quickly - I invest one dirham today and expect two Dirhams tomorrow kind of philosophy. Big business, property developers and retailers seem to all emphasise this "money can buy you happiness" and "money can buy you lifestyle" mentality – sad and superficial! Three other people who have met over the last two weeks agreed with me, they basically summed it up as “Dubai is becoming greedy”.
A wake-up call to the people of Dubai, money cannot buy you health happiness, class or style!