Dubai’s non-oil private sector grew robustly in December, with activity reaching its highest level in 16 months as new orders rose and cost pressures eased.
The seasonally adjusted S&P Global Dubai purchasing managers’ index reading hit 57.7 last month, up from 56.8 in November and well above the neutral 50-point mark separating an expansion from a contraction.
The reading was the highest since August 2022 and the second highest in four-and-a-half years.
Companies continued to report rapid improvements in sales and activity, while softening cost pressures allowed them to offer greater discounts to customers, the survey said.
“The Dubai non-oil economy ended 2023 on a high, according to PMI results, as the headline index rose to a 16-month peak and indicated a substantial improvement in business conditions in December,” said David Owen, senior economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.
New order growth accelerated to the second quickest since mid-2019, “confirming the strength of market demand across the emirate as we enter the new year”, he said.
About 30 per cent of survey members noted an improvement in new orders.
The strongest upturn in sales was in the wholesale and retail sector, while the travel and tourism sector also registered robust growth.
The emirate has been recording a surge in tourism, with the Dubai International Airport welcoming 22.9 million passengers in the third quarter of 2023, the highest quarterly traffic since 2019, Dubai Airports said in November.
That took the total traffic for the first nine months of the year to 64.5 million passengers, up 39.3 per cent compared with the same period in 2022.
Overall, Dubai Airports expects to exceed pre-coronavirus levels for 2023 with 86.8 million travellers, up from 86.4 million in 2019.
Dubai’s overall economic growth momentum is expected to continue after its gross domestic product expanded by 3.2 per cent annually in the first half of last year to Dh223.8 billion ($60.9 billion), according to official data released in October.