Dubai’s non-oil sector sees quickest business growth in August, highest in two years
Dubai: The pace of growth in non-oil activity across Dubai accelerated again in August, reaching its highest level for almost two years, according to the Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) by IHS Markit.
The report showed Dubai’s economy continued its run of solid improvements in business conditions over the third quarter of the year. As a result, firms increased their employment levels at the fastest rate since November 2019.
This suggests that the economy is solidifying its recovery from the pandemic, especially after relaxing travel measures
The headline PMI ticked up from 53.2 in July to 53.3 in August, signaling another solid upturn in operating conditions in the non-oil sector. Moreover, the index has registered higher only once in the last 21 months, in April 2021.
Key areas
Sector data suggested that growth was particularly driven by the travel & tourism category in August, with businesses seeing the sharpest increases in activity and new work in over two years as looser travel restrictions drove an influx of tourist numbers.
Output growth among construction firms was also strong, having accelerated to a 13-month high. Non-oil companies reported a further increase in staffing levels midway through the third quarter.
Expansion was also recorded in purchasing activity and inventories during August, with the latter seeing a renewed increase. Delivery times lengthened for a seventh consecutive month, although the downturn was the weakest seen in this sequence.
Non-oil companies again lowered their output prices to retain clients and win new contracts. The pace of discounting quickened from July to the fastest in five months, but remained slower than the average recorded in 2020.
Expo 2020
Firms were slightly more confident regarding future output. Respondents with a positive outlook cited expectations of increased new business arising from Expo 2020, the easing COVID-19 restrictions, and the ongoing vaccination programme. “With this in mind, firms expanded their staff capacity in August, leading to the sharpest rise in employment since late-2019,” said Owen.
Despite a rise in input costs, uncertainty about the stability of customer demand led Dubai companies to discount their output charges for the second month running.
Firms linked the increase in activity to improving new business volumes as the economy recovered. That said, the overall pace of new order growth eased slightly since the start of the third quarter.