UAE aims to remain magnet for investors

 UAE aims to remain magnet for investors

Tax advantages paired with a life of luxury have long drawn foreigners and multinationals to the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which is aiming to remain attractive whether or not it signs up to a global tax initiative.

The Group of Seven (G7) wealthy powers this month endorsed an “unprecedented” agreement on a global minimum corporate tax targeting major companies seen as not paying enough, especially tech giants.The objective is a minimum tax of at least 15 per cent.

While the agreement is the first step in a long process before it can become a reality, caught in the crosshairs are tax havens that attract firms such as Amazon, Apple, Google and Facebook. The UAE entered the world’s top 10 tax havens for the first time in March, according to advocacy group Tax Justice Network.

Modestly called “jurisdictions with no or insignificant taxes” by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the havens include the Bahamas, the British Virgin Islands, Guernsey, Jersey, the UAE and many others.

Both UAE capital Abu Dhabi and freewheeling Dubai, the biggest draw for investors out of the UAE’s seven emirates, are home to thousands of companies that have set up regional offices there.

UAE officials have yet to issue a statement on the G7 agreement and did not respond to an AFP request for comment.

But this week, Dubai announced plans to reduce in the coming month’s government procedures as “part of efforts to reduce the cost of doing business and further boost economic growth in the emirates”.

The UAE’s low tax regime has been a “major carrot to dangle” before investors from abroad, said Robert Mogielnicki, senior resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.

“Emirati policymakers will have to get creative and consider restructuring various business-related fees,” he told AFP. “But even with the envisioned impact of a minimum global corporate tax, the UAE will remain a relatively low-tax environment.”

And regardless of new taxes introduced in Gulf countries in the past years amid an economic slump due to a drop in oil prices, Mogielnicki believes the Emirates will remain competitive.

“The UAE’s commercial environment enjoys excellent connectivity to key global markets, a high standard of living, and a dynamic labour market with cost-effective, skilled expatriate labour,” he said. “I don’t think the UAE government or its citizenry will truly miss any of the firms or investors who only care about preferential tax treatment over the long run — even if missing out on some business opportunities will sting over the short run. “

source: dawn.com 

chrisjacob636@gmail.com

http://startupinvestoruae.com