Sheikh Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum
His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President, Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai Saturday announced the launch of 'Dubai is the capital of the creative economy'. Image Credit: WAM/Gulf News Archives

Dubai: Dubai has launched a new strategic programme to double the number of creative companies specializing in content, design and culture.

'Dubai is the capital of the creative economy' is the latest programme launched by the emirate, to further promote the city as a global economic capital. Accordingly, number of creative companies will be doubled from 8,000 to 15,000 over the next five years.

The number of creative people will also double from 70,000 t0 150,000.

Making the announcement of his twitter page, His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, said: “Dubai is the capital of the creative economy in the region and the world ... a new strategic programme that we launched today to double the number of creative companies in specializing in content, design and culture from 8,000 to 15,000 within the next five years as well as the number of creative people from 70,000 in Dubai currently to 150,000”.

“We have creative complexes in design, content, culture, arts, etc…We will launch others. We have set a goal to raise the contribution of this sector within our gross domestic product from 2.6 per cent to 5 per cent. The UAE is a global economic capital and creativity is part of our economy, our quality of life and a major driver for the future of our country,” he tweeted.

Targets of strategy

The Dubai Creative Economy Strategy aims to double the creative industries’ GDP contribution to 5 per cent of Dubai’s economy by 2025, from 2.6 per cent at the end of 2020.

To achieve its goals, the Dubai Creative Economy Strategy includes upgrading the legal and investment environment needed to spur the growth and prosperity of creative industries in Dubai

The strategy will contribute to transforming Dubai into a global capital for the creative economy, a direct translation of the vision of Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, and an implementation of Dubai Plan 2021 which aspires to elevate Dubai’s leading role as a global hub in a variety of economic, financial, and business sectors.

The concept of a creative economy covers broad and varied fields including publishing, writing, audio-visual and print, media such as cinema, music and video, as well as artistic and cultural industries, cultural heritage museums, historical sites, archives, major cultural events, libraries, and the software and videogame industry. It also includes design in all of its many variations, whether related to fashion, gaming, software, or architecture – those industries where creative minds can produce new and exciting concepts.

Capital of creative economy

“Today, we launch the Dubai Creative Economy Strategy with the aim of transforming the emirate into a preferred destination for creativity from across the world and a capital of the creative economy by 2025, in order to achieve our vision for a future economy based on knowledge and innovation,” Sheikh Mohammed said in a Tweet.

His Highness affirmed that the rapid evolution of Dubai has been predicated on bold and creative ideas, adding: “We always welcome creative individuals and companies from all over the world, and we seek to provide a suitable environment for them to transform their dreams, aspirations and creativity into an added value and a sustainable economic resource.”

“The UAE is a global economic capital, and creativity is part of our economy and of our quality of life, and a major engine for the future of our country,” Sheikh Mohammed said.

The Dubai Creative Economy Strategy is an integrated initiative that aims to develop the creative industries sustainably by rolling-out the requisite legislative, investment and technical frameworks to support and catalyse the vast and expanding creative community in Dubai.

To ensure this, a number of flexible packages, incentives and advanced creative incubators will be provided to maintain pace with the rapid technological developments shaping the world. By harnessing the technologies of the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR), Dubai can enrich the creative industries’ ability to enhance its competitiveness in local and global markets.

Support and partnership

The Dubai Creative Economy Strategy is being implemented under the patronage of Sheikha Latifa bint Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Chairperson of the Dubai Culture & Arts Authority (Dubai Culture), and supervised by the Dubai Culture & Arts Authority in cooperation with a number of strategic partners, notably, the Dubai Roads & Transport Authority (RTA), Dubai Municipality, Dubai Economy, and Wasl Asset Management Group, with the aim of achieving galvanising new levels of productivity from Dubai’s creative economy.

Stimulating creativity

The Dubai Creative Economy Strategy focuses on providing a suitable and stimulating climate for creatives to generate added economic value to their creativity, by integrating creativity with capital investment opportunities with distinguished returns, thus enhancing Dubai’s position as a global destination for culture and creativity, while also fortifying its role as a global engine of the world’s creative economy. It will also contribute significantly to diversifying and accelerating an economy based on knowledge, innovation and creativity.

Strategic objectives

In addition to doubling the contribution of the creative industries to Dubai’s GDP, the main objectives of the Dubai Creative Economy Strategy include more than doubling the number of creative and culture companies and institutions operating in the field of creative industries from 8,300 currently to 15,000 companies and institutions by 2025. It is expected that this will lead to a doubling in the number of jobs provided by creative industries from 70,000 jobs currently to 140,000 jobs in the coming period.

The driving philosophy of the Dubai Creative Economy Strategy stems from the emirate’s big goals and objectives of enhancing creative economic output and improving social cohesion by highlighting the unique national identity of the UAE by leveraging the innate cultural diversity of Emirati society which has always welcomed and fostered creative talents from all over the world.

To further drive this philosophy, the Dubai Creative Economy Strategy will see the launch of an integrated zone for creative individuals in Dubai that provides the requisite components for developing a world-class creative sector in the emirate which enables and empowers talents to compete on the global stage.

Additionally, it will include the launch of the Creative Economy Classification and Measurement Framework, a dynamic new tool that will allow Dubai to measure the scale and impact of its creative economy beyond GDP contribution. It will enable Dubai to take its “creative pulse”.

Early awareness

Though Dubai has long-realised the importance of the creative economy and its positive impact on the overall economy, the emirate has successfully formulated a new concept for creative entrepreneurship and has invested in establishing creative clusters to attract a multitude of companies and thousands of creatives from across the world, which has resulted in an increase in the sector’s contribution to GPD. It has effectively unleashed the massive and promising potential they offer and enabled them to play a pivotal role in meeting the sustainable development goals (SGDs) outlined by the United Nations.

Dubai began the process of the creative economy decades ago with the establishment of expansive and sophisticated creative complexes in various sectors such as Dubai Internet City, Dubai Media City, Dubai Production City, Dubai Studio City and Dubai Design District, which saw the creative economy contribute 2.6 per cent to Dubai’s GDP by the end of 2020.

Unprecedented transformations

Globally, the creative economy is witnessing an unprecedented boom. Global revenues have reached a total of US$2.25 trillion - representing 10 per cent of global GDP in addition to creating 30 million jobs. There is enormous potential of this sector for the years ahead, and it’s at the epicentre of Dubai’s plans for building a resilient, agile and sustainable economy.