Analysis Retail Ecommerce or bust: in-depth analysis on Gulf online shopping By Pramod Kumar July 27, 2022, 6:18 AM Supplied Carrefour supermarket delivery in the UAE The coronavirus pandemic encouraged many people to embrace online shopping for the first time, leading to a huge spike in global ecommerce. But what does the sector look like now across the Middle East and North Africa? Its three largest ecommerce markets are the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Israel, and together they account for more than 70 percent of total ecommerce in the region. Let the tills ring out: retail is back with a vengeance in the UAE Ethical fashion: it’s so right now, but it’s granny chic too Net zero is old hat, says the mall owner that wants to go bigger The tourists are back – and they want to shop till they drop According to a joint report published by EZDubai and Euromonitor Consulting, the MENA ecommerce market was worth $31.7 billion in 2021, having expanded by 15 percent since 2020. The sector has seen a compound annual growth rate of 33 percent since 2017, when it was valued at just $10bn. Report published by EZDubai and Euromonitor Consulting Largely shopping on their smartphones, the region’s online consumers mostly buy electronics, which represented 31 percent of total ecommerce sales last year. Clothing and footwear (23 percent) are the next most purchased goods. Although growth in ecommerce penetration in the MENA region was the strongest globally last year, as a proportion of overall retail, it is still lower than the global average at just 6 percent. The sector is primed for further expansion. The EZDubai/Euromonitor Consulting report forecasts that ecommerce in the MENA region will be worth $49.9 billion by 2025. It predicts the fastest growing segments will be food and drink and consumer health. Looking specifically at the UAE, its ecommerce market doubled in size in two years, to $5 billion in 2021, and is expected to reach $8 billion by 2025. Again, consumer electronics, clothing and footwear are the largest segments for online purchases. UAE residents also enjoy ordering food online, with the highest use of smartphones for online food orders across the MENA region. They are also big spenders, with an average transaction size of $122 in 2019-20, compared with just $22 in emerging markets, and $76 in mature ecommerce markets. Across the MENA region, per capita ecommerce spending in 2021 was highest in Israel ($1,344), followed by the UAE ($553) and Kuwait ($257). These countries are noted for their high income levels and internet access. The growth in ecommerce is being supported by continued investments in the region’s telecoms infrastructure, delivering faster internet speeds and better connectivity, and improvements to regulatory frameworks governing online payments. The total number of internet users in the MENA region has leapt in the past decade, from 75.6 million in 2010 to 239 million in 2021. Some 80 percent of households now own a smartphone.