The UAE has one of the lowest
unemployment levels in the world, standing
at only 2.4 per cent at the end of 2001 as
a result of high growth in the non-oil economy
and a government drive to find jobs for citizens,
according to official estimates.
The
country's workforce was estimated at around
2.079 million last year, of which nearly
2.029 million were employed, the Ministry
of Planning said in its 2002 annual report.
This
means around 50,000 people were jobless,
accounting for about 2.4 per cent of the
total labour force and just 1.4 per cent
of the 3.48 million population.
The
ministry said it had revised its figures
for the workforce which it earlier estimated
at around 1.85 million at the end of 2001.
Experts
said the revision was apparently prompted
by drastic changes in the labour market
as thousands of expatriates had to leave
because of new labour policies while a large
number of nationals are taking up jobs after
reaching the legal job age.

"Compared
to other developing or even developed countries,
the UAE's unemployment rate is one of the
lowest in the world," said a UAE banker.
But
experts noted official estimates do not
include thousands of illegal expatriate
residents who are not registered with the
Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs. Although
some of them have part time jobs in violation
of labour laws, many of them are unemployed.
More
than 200,000 illegal migrants, mostly Asians,
left the UAE five years ago to benefit from
a general amnesty ordered by President His
Highness Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan
to clean up the country from immigration
violations and restore discipline in the
job market. Another spardon is expected
to be announced in the next few weeks.
Although
actual unemployment rates might be higher,
the UAE does not have a real joblessness
given its strong economy and a serious government
campaign to employ nationals through the
creation of new jobs in the public and private
sectors and replacement of expatriate workers.
Economists
said they saw no hurdles for such a campaign
as the non-oil economy is growing by at
least four per cent, which is faster than
the population growth.
"This
means the UAE can cope with the population
growth and at the same time maintain its
high per capita income which has eroded
sharply in other countries in the region,"
an expert said.
A
breakdown by the Ministry of Planning showed
the UAE has never suffered from a severe
unemployment problem, with the rate standing
at only 1.9 per cent in 1975.
It
fluctuated in the following years but remained
in the range of one to three per cent.
The
level is expected to be maintained in the
following years as the government's new
labour policies focus on employment of nationals
and deportation of unnecessary and unqualified
foreign workers.
The
private sector will likely play a major
role in the employment of citizens given
its massive potential and the fact that
the public sector is saturated and is not
growing enough to accommodate large numbers
of new jobs. |