UAE eyes closer trade ties with Asia, Africa

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Dubai / Reuters

The United Arab Emirates, one
of the Middle East’s largest economies, wants to expand trade ties with faster growing nations in Asia and Africa, a senior official said on Sunday. Gulf Arab states are looking at ways to diversify their economies, including who they trade with, after more than two years of depressed oil prices forced a rethink of government spending.
The pace of economic growth in Asian and sub-Saharan African economies has made them ideal partners, Abdullah al-Saleh, undersecretary for foreign trade and industry at the UAE ministry of the economy, told Reuters in an interview in Dubai.
Asia’s two largest economies China and India are expected to grow by 6.5 percent and 7.2 percent this year whilst sub-Saharan Africa is forecast to expand by 2.8 percent, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
There are “huge opportunities” in China and India but also in Singapore and Indonesia, al-Saleh said. In 2015, the UAE’s non-oil trade with Asia was worth 450 billion dirhams ($122.5 billion), according to al-Saleh.
Two-thirds of its trade with Asia is with six markets; China, India, Japan, Iran, South Korea and Hong Kong. The UAE wants to see free trade agreements between the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and China, India, Australia and New Zealand to be a priority, al-Saleh said.
Though already having close ties to North Africa in part through shared culture, language and religion, the UAE is looking for deeper ties with sub-Saharan Africa. “The latest reforms in some of African countries are very attractive for us,” al-Saleh said.

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