|
March 16, 2010 By Doug Hornig,
Casey Research
Forty years ago, it was a small town on the Persian Gulf,
merely one of seven sheikdoms joined in federation in 1971 to
create the United Arab Emirates. Basically, there was nothing
there but sand. Yes, oil had been discovered under that sand,
and the city/state was enjoying its first economic boomlet. From
about 60,000 in 1968, population tripled by 1975, doubled in the
next ten years, and nearly doubled again by 1995.
Problem is, especially compared with many of its Gulf
neighbors, it didn’t have all that much oil to begin with, and
its reserves were falling fast. What it did have was Sheikh
Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, the most influential member of
the family that had ruled for more than a century and a half.
And the sheikh had a vision.
Sheikh Mohammed believed that the Muslim world needed a New
Baghdad, a center of commerce and learning and culture that
would shine like the hub of the old caliphate, which had
dominated the civilized world a thousand years earlier. He was
determined to erect a dazzling, ultra-modern new metropolis,
starting from scratch.
On the sands of Dubai.
The rest of the story is pretty well known. The crown prince,
and later ruler, of Dubai had his way. His emirate became one of
the richest and gaudiest places on the planet. Population shot
to almost 1½ million, about 90% of them immigrants – from
unskilled Bangladeshi laborers to software engineers from the
U.S. – all lured by the promise of better-paying jobs than they
could find at home.
Even more striking was the explosion of construction
projects. Up went mansions, office skyscrapers, artificial
islands, stadiums, a speedy Metro, a busy international airport,
and the world’s only 7-star hotel, among other things. And the
capstone was, of course, the Burj Khalifa, formally opened on
January 4.
The Burj Khalifa is the tallest manmade structure on earth.
Not by a little, mind you; halfway is not a word in Sheikh
Mohammed’s vocabulary. Tallest by so much that it boggles the
mind. It’s 2,717 feet high. That’s more than half a mile. For
comparison purposes, take New York’s late Twin Towers. Stack
them one atop the other. Now you’ve got the Burj Khalifa.
Begun in late 2004, the building was originally budgeted at
US$869 million. Final tally as we entered 2010 was something
north of a billion and a half. That bought the first luxury
hotel to bear the Armani name, four swimming pools, a
158th-floor mosque, 57 elevators, and an observation deck at
1,450 feet, along with 52,490 square meters of office space and
288,000 square meters divided among 900 apartments.
Its coming-out party, with 10,000 fireworks and synchronized
fountains shooting jets of water 150 feet into the air, was a
spectacular light show, worth watching if you haven’t yet seen
it, here
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRxxv6AZ_xg&feature=fvw .
Hard to believe that you’re looking at a bone-dry desert.
You may also be looking at a gargantuan white elephant.
Although every unit in the Burj Khalifa has supposedly been
sold, some unknown percentage of buyers (likely very large) was
speculators who opted in during the height of the world real
estate boom. Properties were flipped like it was Southern
California. At the market peak, modest flats were fetching more
than $2,700/sq. ft. No wonder Emaar Properties, developer of the
project, claims it has already recouped its capital outlay from
these suck--, er, investors.
Those prices have now plummeted by up to 50%. Of the folks
left holding the bag, how many of the 25,000 slated to live in
the building will actually do so? We don’t know, and no one who
does will talk vacancy rates. In terms of transparency, Dubai
makes the Bush administration look like an ad for Window World.
What we do know is that at the moment the structure is the
Big Empty. Western critics have limbered up their keyboard
fingers in order to pound out expressions of disdain, everything
from “The Final Monument to Excess” to “Bling City Is Dead” to
“The End of Capitalism.” The first may be apt, as we’ll probably
not see the likes of the Burj Khalifa again, but the last?
That’s something we want to look at more closely. There is a
lesson to be learned.
The truth of the matter is that there were two key, and
contradictory, elements to the Dubai miracle, and when the world
recession hit in 2007, one overrode the other and the whole
thing came tumbling down.
First: As noted, Sheikh Mohammed didn’t have a river of oil
money to rely on. So how did he manage to build his gleaming
city by the sea? On the surface, it was simple. Turn Dubai into
one of the world’s premier places to do business. Make it
essentially tax free. Create investment incentives. Attract
entrepreneurs from all over. Enlarge and capitalize on the
city’s status as a deep water port. Replace traditional
smuggling with legit import/export operations. Become a world
financial center.
In short, install the best aspects of free-market capitalism,
then send an Open for Business letter to the world.
It worked. Capital, resources, and personnel flooded in. By
2005, oil and gas were responsible for only 6% of the emirate’s
GDP. Property and construction was the biggest contributor at
22.6%, followed by trade at 16%, entrepôt (duty-free
import/export business) at 15%, and financial services at 11%.
No one, apparently, thought it ominous that nearly a quarter
of GDP was generated by the construction and trading of
properties, nor paused to consider what would happen when the
music stopped and supply exceeded demand. Dubai was riding high,
a model for other resource-poor, developing nations, showing
them how to get rich.
|
Subscribe
to our FREE monthly E-Zine and we will notify you when this
chart has been updated!
Webmasters if you would like to use
any of our charts please check our
usage
policy.
|
|
Today, the hot desert wind blows through half-buildings that
will never be finished. Immigrants, their work visas rescinded,
are rounded up and sent home. Mercedes Benzes and Jaguars have
For Sale signs taped to their windows or are just abandoned at
the airport. Real estate prices tanked by 50% in 2009 and are
projected to suffer another 30% haircut this year. The stock
market has plunged 70%. Unmaintained, the artificial islands
designed as millionaires’ playpens have begun to sink beneath
the sea.
The glorious ride is over. But just in case there was any
doubt, the point was hammered home last November, when Dubai
World – one of the country’s leading development conglomerates –
told creditors it was declaring a six-month moratorium on
repayments it could no longer make.
That sent shock waves through financial markets the world
over. Everyone, it seems, had invested in Dubai during the boom
times. Now they’re staring at a very unfavorable restructuring
at best and flat-out default at worst.
Dubai’s debt, or at least as much of it as its rulers will
reveal, is about US$80 billion, or 140% of GDP. Bad enough, but
it may well be significantly understated. One local investment
banker puts the real number in the $120-150 billion range; with
no balance sheets to pore over, we can’t know. Dubai will ask
oil-rich fellow emirate Abu Dhabi for help, but there are no
guarantees help will be forthcoming. Abu Dhabi has always cast a
disapproving eye on Dubai’s helter skelter expansionism, and if
it does step in, it will probably demand a whole lot of
collateral.
Critics of a certain bent have pounced. History’s grandest
experiment in unfettered free-market capitalism ran aground,
they cry. Therefore the system doesn’t really work.
Which brings us to the second element in the Dubai miracle.
It was built on a mountain of debt that couldn’t survive an
economic downturn. And who supported that debt? The government.
All of those go-go corporations, like Dubai World, are
essentially government owned. Sheikh Mohammed wanted his New
Baghdad, no matter the cost.
|
Granted, private enterprise businesses are imperfect. When in
trouble, they will lie and cheat like anyone else. But in the
end, they have a bottom line that they have to reveal at some
point. Accounting tricks are eventually exposed. Capitalism,
like a computer, is strictly binary. A company with sound
finances prospers; a company that fails in the marketplace
simply disappears.
Government-sponsored entities have no such limitations. They’re
actively encouraged to overreach, to take risks that no sane CFO
would approve. Because if they bleed red ink, the government is
there to step in and prop them up. All of Dubai’s corporations were
“too big to fail.” But fail they did, and in the process pushed the
government into insolvency as well.
The takeaway from this story is simple. Dubai was no more
free-market capitalist than Soviet Russia. Or the U.S., for that
matter. If the government is the guarantor of last resort or just
perceived as the ultimate reliable source of bailout money, a
business has no incentive to be well run. When government (with
taxpayer funding) takes a stake in even that most American of
corporations, GM, capitalism truly has collapsed. Not, however,
because of its shortcomings. Because government has not allowed it
to function properly.
Though we lack a symbolic last gasp like the Burj Khalifa, make
no mistake about it: we’re all fellow travelers with Dubai now.
Washington would do well to study what happened there and hopefully
learn a thing or two. Because we’re speeding toward the same
crack-up.
The U.S. economy is like an out-of-control sports car in search
of a tree, and the government is not “here to help you.” Take
matters in your own hands and prepare as best as you can for the
crash that will come. To find out what to expect in 2010 and how to
bullet-proof your assets, read our FREE special report “The Good,
the Bad, and the Ugly.”
More here…

|