StageLeft
No Lifer
Dubai came up in another thread, so I did some more reading on it, and I think it deserves its own.
Dubai has been touted (heck, I've done it myself) as an economic powerhouse. Dubai itself, part of the United Arab Emirates, has grown not on oil but on tourism and real-estate and, well, hysteria. I personally know a few people who've gone there and gotten paid a great deal of money. Property values have gone through the roof (would make a person in Manhattan blush). Well, what goes up, must come down. Here are some links:
December 7, 2005
Feb 13, 2006
April 1, 2007
Feb 27, 2008
Nov 27, 2008
Feb 8, 2009
Much lower GDP projections...
Feb 11, 2009
This posted in another thread...
Dubai has been touted (heck, I've done it myself) as an economic powerhouse. Dubai itself, part of the United Arab Emirates, has grown not on oil but on tourism and real-estate and, well, hysteria. I personally know a few people who've gone there and gotten paid a great deal of money. Property values have gone through the roof (would make a person in Manhattan blush). Well, what goes up, must come down. Here are some links:
December 7, 2005
Thirty years ago, Dubai was a small fishing port where people came to dive for pearls or trade gold. Now it is one of the fastest-growing cities in the world.
Last year, Dubai's economy grew by almost 17%, four times faster than that of the United States and twice as fast as China's...He does not believe that the current building boom is unsustainable.
"Dubai has been expanding continuously for 30 years. There has never been a crash here."
Feb 13, 2006
The fastest-growing city on earth...it become the most important place on the planet?
April 1, 2007
World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC) president...told ATN Dubai's bubble "will never burst".
Feb 27, 2008
Wth! Author ponders when the bubble will burst. You can read some of the blog posts below for lawls, as some appear completely oblivious to it.25 percent of the world?s operating construction cranes are currently in Dubai
Nov 27, 2008
debate moves from whether the Dubai property bubble will burst to just how bad it is going to get. Some nervous bankers think property prices could fall by 80% or so in the next year or so.
Feb 8, 2009
Much lower GDP projections...
Companies across Dubai have laid off thousands of employees as real estate prices dropped by at least a quarter from a peak late last year after speculators exited the market
Feb 11, 2009
This posted in another thread...
With Dubai?s economy in free fall, newspapers have reported that more than 3,000 cars sit abandoned in the parking lot at the Dubai Airport, left by fleeing, debt-ridden foreigners (who could in fact be imprisoned if they failed to pay their bills).