Reports
Economic Growth and Complexity in the UAE: Summary Report
Executive Summary
This document summarizes high-level findings on the United Arab Emirates’ (UAE) growth trajectory, economic diversification record, and future prospects. It is based on the work carried out as part of an ongoing collaboration between Harvard’s Growth Lab and the UAE Ministry of Economy (MoE). This collaboration aims to produce novel research-based inputs to inform an ambitious, forward-looking economic policy agenda. Over the last year, it has entailed research on various topics. These have included documenting the country’s past growth path and potential for the future, understanding UAE’s short-run macroeconomic and inflation dynamics, studying trade patterns and free-trade agreements, and looking into labor markets and productivity dynamics.
This document provides a summary of some of the research stemming from the first phase of work, drawing especially on two reports: Elements of a Growth Diagnostic: The United Arab Emirates (Brenot et al, unpublished) and Economic Complexity: The United Arab Emirates (Tapia et al, 2023). These two reports together lay out research on the UAE’s growth model over the last two decades and use an “economic complexity” lens to analyze where future sources of diversification and growth might come from. The Elements of a Growth Diagnostic report mainly focuses on the past. It examines the UAE’s growth performance between 2000 and 2019 (prior to the COVID-19 pandemic) to understand the drivers of the UAE’s growth model and document the changes in the UAE economy during this time. Economic Complexity: The United Arab Emirates looks at the performance of the UAE’s exports and industrial diversification using a “knowhow” and complexity lens, pioneered by Hidalgo & Hausmann (2009), and also suggests high-potential activities for further diversification.
As part of a broader research agenda, this summary document is meant as a companion piece to more than a year of past research, but also as a starting point for the next phase of collaboration between the Growth Lab and the MoE. In addition to this summary document and the reports it draws on, there is also a companion Inputs for Policy Design – Tools for Economic Diversification report. The report makes a more policy-oriented contribution, discussing more in-depth three concrete tools to achieve further economic diversification: foreign direct investment (FDI), Free Zones, and Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWFs).
This summary document highlights the key themes and insights gathered during this past year, while also laying out a set of questions for future research. The rest of this document is structured as follows. Section 2 summarizes key themes of the UAE’s past growth performance and its key drivers at an aggregate, national level. Section 3 goes deeper to describe the current state of the UAE economy by geography and sector, and documents the way the economy has already begun to diversify into non-oil activities. Section 4 further examines the UAE’s diversification path using a complexity approach to better shed light on the UAE’s future diversification prospects. Finally, Section 5 concludes with a set of key takeaways and themes for further research.