Dubai’s companies increase hiring in October

November 9, 2022 at 12:11 PM

Business activity in Dubai’s non-oil private sector economy was “robust” in October as companies increased their headcounts at the fastest pace in about three years amid stronger new orders.

According to The National News, the emirate’s headline seasonally adjusted S&P Global purchasing managers’ index reading stood at 56, above the neutral 50 mark separating expansion from contraction.

While the reading was softer than the 56.2 reading in September new business inflows continued to rise at one of the sharpest rates since mid-2019, according to the survey.

All of the sectors covered by the survey grew at considerable rates, led by the sharpest upturn in wholesale and retail since July 2019.

“Employment levels rose at the fastest rate for nearly three years as firms looked to boost labour capacity and prepare for higher workloads,” said David Owen, an economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence.

“At the same time, lower commodity prices and reduced transport costs helped to push business expenses down for the second time in three months, enabling a solid reduction in output charges.”

A reduction in prices helped underpin stronger demand, with output charges decreasing the most since August 2020, while input prices declined for the second time in three months.

The increase in activity across all sectors in the survey was a result of “a marked uplift in new order inflows” and the rate of sales growth edged up from September and was one of the strongest recorded for over three years.

Higher demand levels accelerated the rate of job creation, which was the fastest in November 2019.

A renewed fall in expenses during October, the second reduction in the past three months, was attributed to lower oil and transport prices.

The emirate’s economy grew by 6.2 per cent in 2021, according to preliminary data from the Dubai Statistics Centre. In the first three months of this year, Dubai’s gross domestic product expanded 5.9 per cent, according to government data. (NewsWire)