Been watching and lurking with interest here...
OK, a series of questions to UAEKid:
Are you a sponsor?
Do you or any of your family have 51% shares in any businesses where you are not directly involved, sign the odd paper and take a fee annually?
Do you have any investment in any real estate projects here that your country has built with the specific objective of attracting more expats to come here?
Do you frequent 5* hotel establishments where certain elements of Dubai society are actively made unwelcome and stopped from entering at the security gate?
Do you see any of the tourists who are staying there being stopped?
Have you ever had to pay rent for a small shared space?
Have you ever been on a crowded non air conditioned bus in summer with bars on the windows that stop you from getting out in the event of an accident?
If you ask yourself these questions, then consider what your short term future options are bearing in mind that:
The UAE has applied for membership of the WTO for the year 2010. Part of the stipulations of membership are that there must be a free trade environment. That means no more 51% exclusive company ownership. No more nice sponsorship fees.
So you fall back on your ownership of real estate and the income it can generate. As has been widely reported, the number of empty properties in Dubai is escalating because the local landlords refuse to drop their rents to sensible levels and no-one will pay the ludicrous rents. As the number of people here falls (it is falling at a surprisingly rapid rate...figures from DNAID and the typing bureaus show that the number of visas being cancelled is now at 32,000...per week!!) there will be more property available on the market and less people looking to rent them. As a result, you will end up looking at the glass tower you own and realise that it is empty and costing you heavily to keep it maintained as it was poorly built.
You cannot sell it. No-one wants to buy it. You are stuck with the costs.
So you get in your Hummer and you go to the 5* hotel to 'drown your sorrows' but the security guard stops you at the gate because you are wearing national dress and there is alcohol on sale there and your ruler has decreed that you should not be seen there. You have no choice. Your ruler has made the law.
As the country is in such dire financial condition, the ruler has also decreed that you are no longer going to receive a plot of land or villa for your wedding and you must buy your own...or rent one. Then you find you are being asked to pay 180,000 dhs. a year for a small, pokey 2 bedroom apartment on a building site with no access, water, electricity or sewerage. You want to complain, but the landlord does nothing because just wants your money and doesn't care about the problems of his creation.
So you have to sell your Hummer to pay the rent. What are your other options to get to the coffee shop in Jumeirah where you want to spend your whole day sitting around and chatting to your friends. There is only the bus, or a taxi. The metro would be a good idea, but it doesn't go there. After waiting for 1 hour in the sun, the bus arrives and is overcrowded and there is no room for you, so you take a taxi instead, but the driver has no idea where Jumeirah is as he only arrived in the UAE 2 weeks before, has no training, is forced to work for 6 hours each day for free before he earns anything, and is need of a bath because there was no water that morning in the labour camp where he shares his room with 10 other drivers. Never mind, you will get there eventually and have to pay double the fee because he gets lost every 2 minutes.
And when you get there...you find the coffee shop has been forced to close down because the landlord put the rent up so much, the business was no longer viable. So the Iranian owner has flown back to Tehran to the big villa he has bought and been renovating for the last 10 years from the money he has earned and shipped out of the UAE on a regular basis.
This is YOUR country. If you want your dream to last more than the next 12 months, you had better wake up, smell the hummus and realise that the whole thing is about to crash about your ears if you don't integrate into the 21st century and start to improve the infrastructure.
And who is going to do this for you?
Experts.
From outside the UAE.
Expat experts.
Oh, but you are not going to make them welcome. You will charge them 10 times the price you pay for their electricity and water, extort them for rents, not allow them the freedom to improve their financial position by moving jobs...because (in your eyes) you think you own them and they are there for your benefit.
We like your country. Some of us live here through choice, not because we cannot work anywhere else, and are willing to provide the mentoring and advice learned through hard years of education and experience. Who is listening? Certainly not you. So you may have to suffer the consequences of you short sightedness. The desert can reclaim this city in a very short period of time. There will be plenty of sand for you to bury your head in then.
Just a few thoughts for you.
Knight