Showing posts with label expatriate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label expatriate. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 February 2010

Dubai losing its professional workforce


This may come as a surprise to those who live outside the area or who still believe the 'bouncing back, everything's fine and the property market is recovering' stories.  But, to quote Basil Fawlty, this article is 'stating the bleeding obvious' to anyone else. 
Source: ArabianBusiness.com 23 February 2010
Photo: I took it on a Nikon D40
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Dubai lost 17 percent of its professional workforce in 2009, with Western foreign nationals hit the hardest, according to recruitment agency GulfTalent.
The Gulf Arab emirate, famous for its artificial, palm-shaped islands and glitzy lifestyle, has been rocked by a debt crisis that came on the heels of a property downturn.
"One of the biggest developments of 2009 has been a change in the fortunes of Dubai, from the fastest-growing hub in the region, sucking in much of the expatriate talent, to the city experiencing the region's most severe downturn," online recruiter GulfTalent said.
"Across the region, redundancies appear to have disproportionately hit senior executives and western nationals."
Despite Dubai's woes, the UAE remained the most attractive market in the region for expatriate professionals, with 74 percent of people surveyed by GulfTalent saying they wished to stay there.
As a whole, the country's professional workforce fell 16 percent, the survey showed. Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates and Bahraini capital Manama followed, shedding 14.4 percent and 12.8 percent of their workforces.
Salary growth also slowed in the region, with the average pay increase at 6.2 percent compared with 11.4 percent in 2008. GulfTalent saw little change in 2010, predicting growth of 6.3 percent.
In 2009, the UAE's average pay rise was 5.5 percent, down from 13.6 percent the previous year. In contrast, Oman saw an 8.4 percent rise, while Qatar, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia posted 7 percent increases.
The GulfTalent report was based on an online survey of 24,000 professional employees at the region's 3,000 largest corporations as well as a poll of 900 human resources managers and other interviews and reviews.

Friday, 5 June 2009

Double tax plan trouble for Australian government

Article from The Australian, 3 June '09

In a announcement during the 2009 Australian budget, Aussies were told that from July 1, if they worked overseas for more than 90 days they will be required to pay both foreign and Australian income tax, but will be able to claim a credit for the overseas tax.

Given the meagre information supplied during the Budget, the extrapolation was that UAE-based Aussies would be liable for Australian tax on all money earnt here. Not surprisingly, there was panic with a capital P amongst the Aussie expats in the tax free areas of the Middle East and no doubt elsewhere.

I've been told that the tax liability is only for Australian resident employees who work overseas on short term contracts, rather than the non-resident citizens who work in another country long term. However, the distinction isn't made clear in this article and still doesn't seem to have been addressed by the government. Advice received from professional sources in Australia still varies and the Income Tax and Assessment Act 1936 has been top of the reading list for a lot of people who are wrestling with the ATO's definition of "resident" and "non-resident". (Good luck with that, I think you are what the ATO decides you are, which could be a worry down the track.....)

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WAYNE Swan is facing another business backlash, particularly from resources and infrastructure companies, over a surprise $675million budget tax hit on overseas workers.

Anger over the measure comes after the Treasurer was forced to admit mistakes were made in the Rudd Government's crackdown on employee share plans, which caused numerous companies to suspend or review their schemes.

From July 1, people working overseas for more than 90 days will be required to pay both foreign and Australian income tax, but will be able to claim a credit for the overseas tax.

The change, introduced with no warning or transitional arrangements, has affected those currently overseas who left on the understanding they would be exempt from Australian income tax. Many businesses will be forced to foot the tax bill so employees are not left out of pocket.
Companies will also be hit with fringe benefits tax for benefits such as flights back to Australia, telephones and cars, used to entice employees to work on overseas projects.

Australian Mines and Metals Association spokeswoman Minna Knight said the resources sector would press the Government to address its concerns. She said the new rules would have a direct impact on remuneration, recruitment and retention of workers.

"Employers will face increased costs at a time when commodity prices are falling," she said.
Institute of Chartered Accountants tax counsel Yasser El-Ansary, who has already raised concerns with Mr Swan's office, said the changes would hit companies with fixed-price contracts and make businesses less inclined to send workers overseas.

He said the Government should have exempted workers on existing contracts.
PricewaterhouseCoopers partner Warren Dick said many engineering, mining and construction clients had raised concerns about the changes.

"This sort of issue impacts the West Australian market more than any other," he said.
Mr Dick called for changes to ensure overseas benefits were not subject to FBT.

Engineering services company Lycopodium, which has workers in Africa and Asia, said the changes will cost it about $350,000 a month.

The company pleaded with Kevin Rudd and Treasury two weeks ago to reconsider the changes, arguing they would hurt the business in a downturn.

"This is money the company's going to have to shell out," said Lycopodium's chief financial officer Keith Bakker.

Mr Bakker said about 100 of the company's 500 workers were offshore at one time. Although the company liked to send skilled Australians to work overseas, in the long term it have to hire local workers to be competitive.

Mark Hughes, chief financial officer of mining services company Ausdrill, said the changes would also have a major cash-flow impact, as business would be forced to pay the full amount of witholding tax in Australia.

It would be an administrative nightmare to get tax receipts from countries like Ghana, Mali and Tanzania to claim a tax credit from the Australian Taxation Office.

"I don't think they've fully understood what they've let loose," he said.

The changes will also hurt finance companies and law firms with overseas offices.

Allens Arthur Robinson corporate affairs director Chris Fogarty said the law firm would find it more difficult to send lawyers to its Asian offices to work on short-term projects and to give younger lawyers overseas experience.

Tuesday, 26 May 2009

UAE job losses set to continue amid recovery

From ArabianBusiness.com 25 May '09.
Where's this economic recovery happening? Its not happening in my little corner of Dubai where in the last 24 hours two more friends have been made redundant and will leaving the country as there's no work in construction for them. Heard all the 'green shoots' stories blah, blah, blah? You just have to look around you in the UAE to see signs that things here aren't good and they aren't going to improve in the foreseeable future. Raise this question and the response seems to be 'if you don't like it you can leave' and there are plenty of people doing just that or "It can't be that bad because last weekend Dubai Mall /BurJuman/everywhere expect Bin Hendi Luxury Avenue was packed" but how many of those people in the malls were actually buying and how many were there just to escape the heat? If even half the rumoured number of people leave the UAE at the end of the school year (June) and don't return in September, the loss of population will have a noticeable effect on the local economy.

Rents continue to fall. Unfortunately our current landlord lives in a parallel universe where rents haven't dropped, he refuses to lower the rent so we're moving out - the people in the villa next door moved out three weeks ago for the same reason and are living just round the corner at a considerably cheaper rent. We recently looked at a villa in Umm Suqeim 3 that 5 months ago was rented for AED300,000 but now the landlord's asking AED175,000 and still hasn't had a bite in all that time. At this time last year, renting a house in Dubai was a hard task, rents were astronomical and a lot of compounds had waiting lists; now, we drive around the streets and count the "To Let" signs which seem to be growing in number weekly. In the Garhoud area alone, we've looked at maybe 15+ houses, all in the AED170,000-190,000 price range. Last year every one of them would have been in the AED220,000-250,000 range.
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Job losses will continue to take place in the UAE even as economic recovery takes hold, a leading economist in the region warned on Monday.

Further redundancies would happen in the Gulf state over the coming months because the jobs market lagged behind the real economy, said Marios Maratheftis, chief economist at Standard Chartered in the Middle East.

“Inevitably job losses are taking place and, in my opinion, they will continue to take place even as the economy is recovering because the jobs market is a lagging indicator of the economic cycle,” said Maratheftis during MegaTrends, Essential Strategic Insights 2009 in Abu Dhabi.

Despite the economic crisis hitting the UAE in September, it wasn’t until January that staff numbers were cut by many firms, especially those in the real estate, construction and banking sectors, he said.But he said most job cuts had already taken place.

As many as one in four expatriate employees in the UAE have either lost their job or fear they will over the next 12 months, according to a survey released in March by market research company Real Opinions.