Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Dubai growth spills over to neighbouring Sharjah

The Sharjah government's capex is expected to remain 'relatively high' at about 15% of government spending in 2023 Wam
Infrastructure was ranked first among the general budget sectors, with an allocation of 40% of total budget spend for 2024

S&P Global Ratings has affirmed ‘BBB-/A-3’ ratings on Sharjah, driven by UAE’s buoyant oil and non-oil activity supporting growth in the emirate.

“We expect Sharjah’s budgetary performance to gradually stabilise over 2023-2026,” the ratings agency said in a report.

The primary fiscal deficit – deficit excluding debt interest payments – is forecast to trend toward balance, in line with the government’s medium-term fiscal outlook.

Sharjah is one of the seven emirates that make up the UAE, with a population of 1.8 million. Ninety percent of residents are expatriate workers, many of whom take advantage of the lower rental rates in Sharjah and commute to work in neighbouring Dubai.

The emirate’s GDP per capita is estimated to strengthen slightly to $21,500 in 2023 from $20,700 in 2022.

Since the emirate doesn’t have a large hydrocarbon sector, its economy is more diversified than most peers in the region, with a significant contribution from the cement, glass, petrochemicals, and household goods sectors, among other manufacturing industries.

S&P expects the emirate’s average economic growth of nearly two percent over 2023-2026.

“Strong economic activity in the larger emirates of Dubai and Abu Dhabi, teamed with that across the wider GCC region and supported by favourable oil prices, should uphold Sharjah’s growth prospects.”

The emirate’s largest economic sectors will expand in 2023, with construction contributing 13 percent of nominal GDP, followed by wholesale and retail trade (12 percent), real estate activities (10 percent), manufacturing (six percent), and financial services (five percent).

Capital expenditure is expected to remain “relatively high” at about 15 percent of the government spending in 2023, despite falling 40 percent from 2022.

S&P also maintained a stable outlook backed by the Sharjah government’s move to introduce sufficient measures to stabilise its net general government debt burden as a percentage of GDP over the next two years.

Latest articles

PIF's Starbucks shareholdings were cut almost by half from 6.3 million shares to 3.8 million

PIF slashes Starbucks stake as it cuts US stocks by $15bn

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) has slashed its US equity holdings by 42 percent to $20.6 billion, including its stake in Starbucks, the global coffee chain that has suffered calls for a boycott as a result of the Gaza conflict. The latest US government data highlights funding challenges facing the Saudi giga-projects.  The filing […]

Saudi aluminium producer Talco is offering 12 million shares

Aluminium producer Talco announces Saudi IPO

Aluminium producer Al Taiseer Group Talco Industrial Company (Talco) is the latest entity to reveal initial public offering (IPO) plans in Saudi Arabia. The Riyadh-based company, which was set up in 2009, is offering 12 million shares, a 30 percent stake, on the Saudi Exchange (Tadawul) at a nominal value of SAR10 ($2.67) per share. […]

One of the four restaurants in the Palazzo Versace Dubai hotel, which is listed on the Emirates Auction website

Palazzo Versace hotel sale aims to ride Dubai tourism wave

Owners of Dubai’s ultra-luxurious Palazzo Versace hotel are looking to capitalise on the emirate’s tourism boom before it peaks, offering it for sale at nearly AED1.4 billion ($380 million). A source familiar with the asset told AGBI the hotel is being “readvertised” as it has not found a buyer willing to meet its price tag […]

Wind turbines in Bozcaada, Turkey. The country wants to strengthen its renewable energy sector by developing the solar power market

Turkey’s renewables scheme given $1bn by World Bank

The World Bank has signed a $1 billion programme with Turkey to fast-track the nation’s renewable energy expansion initiatives. The financing comprises €600 million ($657 million) in loans from the International Bank of Reconstruction and Development, $30 million from the clean technology fund, and $3 million in grant funding from the World Bank’s energy sector management assistance […]