ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Saturday, 02 December 2006, ArabianBusiness/News
Has Dubai’s rapid development caused confusion in the property management recruitment industry? Danielle Le Faucheur, senior international consultant for Macdonald & Company seems to think so.
ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Monday, 01 January 2007, ArabianBusiness/Comment
With minimum wage possibly making its debut appearance in the construction world, it has been reported that eventually, other industries will also have to comply. Facilities Management Middle East asks key industry professionals: what kind of impact could this have on the recruitment process?
ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Tuesday, 01 May 2007, ArabianBusiness/Interviews
Macdonald & Company, a property recruitment agency, is carrying out a salary survey on the real estate industry in the Middle East.
ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Saturday, 21 July 2007, ArabianBusiness/News
Recruitment company, Macdonald & Company are to launch a construction slary survey at this year's Cityscape exhibition.
Property salary survey to include facilities management section.
Becca Wilson, Thursday, 09 August 2007, ArabianBusiness/News
The FM industry's leading ladies take part in facilities management Middle East's first roundtable event.
Becca Wilson, Saturday, 01 September 2007, ArabianBusiness/Features
Kuwait real estate and property professionals earn 10% more than their Middle Eastern counterparts, according to the latest statistics from Macdonald & Company.
ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Monday, 03 September 2007, ArabianBusiness/News
CITYSCAPE: Wages and benefits are both improving in step with rocketing house prices in the Gulf.
Rob Corder, Tuesday, 16 October 2007, ArabianBusiness/News
The first RICS (Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors) and Macdonald & Company Middle East Salary Survey, concluded that participants in the FM field have had an average 8.7% salary rise since their last pay review.
ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Monday, 05 November 2007, ArabianBusiness/News
Christopher Stokes, senior consultant, Macdonald & Company, discusses the current state of the FM market.
Gulf developers struggling to recruit talent despite high salaries - survey.
Dylan Bowman, Wednesday, 23 April 2008, ArabianBusiness/News
A shortage of skilled staff is driving up salaries of landscape architects in the Middle East region, according to a survey by a recruitment company.
ArabianBusiness.com staff writer , Monday, 05 May 2008, ArabianBusiness/News
Expansion aims to address growing demand for architecture and design professionals in the region.
Selin Arkut, Wednesday, 30 July 2008, ArabianBusiness/News
EXCLUSIVE: Gulf jobs market 'extremely transient' despite 15% rise in wages.
Main indexes end day down, with Qatar down 6%, Abu Dhabi and Dubai down 3%.
UPDATE 7: Markets end down, Dubai, Abu Dhabi recover sharp losses as foreigners bail.
US investment banks become latest victims of deepening financial crisis on Wall Street.
Mubadala and Qatar Investment Authority unlikely to step in as US financial crisis grows.
Price of crude plunges $7 as investors flee to safer havens due to turmoil in the US financial system.
Comments 1-9 of 9
Posted by prem, Dubai, UAE on 8 August 2009 at 11:09 UAE time
Hamdi is spot on that's the reality. I FORESEE AN L SHAPED RECOVERY FOR DUBAI,its pessimistic but that's the sad truth.
I hope the real estate ROBBERS will never come back again.
Posted by Ramesh, Dubai, UAE on 6 August 2009 at 22:08 UAE time
Real Estate Business --- The hard beautiful strong tempting front cover has been hit,,, . A fascinating wonderful city the fastest growing city of the world.....Dubai gave business to all the other emirates and was like a father and elder brother in terms of business activities and growth. Nobody denies that,,,, it gave business to every single soul and business of UAE .
Dubai will come back strongly but it will take long time because the big vaccum created by the crisis is too large this time around and will be time consuming.
Dubai has everything in fact more than everything to be on the top always.....with phenomenal quick decisions.
Right now things are not good but hopefully it will be good as time passes.
Posted by Liz, dubai, UAE on 6 August 2009 at 14:58 UAE time
Who is telling the truth? When I watch Emirates News on Dubai One, I'm led to believe that the population is about to peak to 5m, hotels are full and that the rulers have successfully cushioned the country from the full effects of the recession. Yet according to independent research by companies such as Macdonald & Co and EFG Hermes, this is cleary not the case. Why this massive descrepency and contradition in news reports? Can we please be told the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth?
Posted by ex damac employee on 6 August 2009 at 14:44 UAE time
Damac terminated more than 70% of the real estate staff.
But Damac and the media, as usual, kept on saying that only 5% of the Damac Group, but fact remains, more than 70% of Real Estate staff were made redundant.
Go around the town you will know, most of the sales offices of the real estate companies closed, no more banners, no full page ads in GN / KT, no more BMW's, air-planes, islands.
I totally agree with Hamdi, the actual figure shall be 75 - 80%.
Posted by Hamdi, Dubai, UAE on 6 August 2009 at 14:29 UAE time
Give us a break... Where do you get your news from EFG-Hermes??... Have paid a visit to the Developers offices recently?? They are almost completelyabandoned.... Its like a graveyard shift in there. Barely skeleton staff are running the show now
I work in the real estate industry and had a contact list of over 400 agents last year... since the crisis hit I send out emails and most of them bounced back (EMAIL DOES NOT EXIST ANYMORE). My list is down to approx 180 names. All my contacts at the developers lost thier jobs and I mean ALLLL of them.
This article should say " Real Estate Industry kept 25 - 35% of its workforce and laid of the rest"
Posted by Raja on 6 August 2009 at 14:24 UAE time
It is very simple to see and judge what is going on.
But somebody wants figure they are also available, which are terrifying for the time being, I wish they not true but truth hurts.
35% of Construction / Real Estate Jobs, as per Dr.Paul and as per the available statistics, 50% of the population is related to the above 2 giant sectors. The current population is 4.10 million, which works out to almost 700,000 people leaving or already left.
Not a small figure, really worrying, no wonder Emirates / Etihad said they had heavy traffic flow in this quarter, you can lie once not always.
Cheers
Posted by Dr Paul Goodwill Ambassador to my Auntie Margaret, Dubai, UAE on 6 August 2009 at 13:36 UAE time
These figures are probably somewhat anecdotal in that they come from a recruiter so will represent a snapshot rather than a full audit of every construction project. But 35% sounds a reasonable figure considering all the job cuts and suspended projects we know about.
The UAE census showed 50% of Dubai's population in this sector couple of years back, so a 35% fall in that would indicate around a 17% in Dubai's population overall, if the non-construction sectors remained largely static. In reality some of those have probably been affected negatively too (tourism, ports). There probably are some new jobs created, but probably not enough to make a huge difference. So the EFG Hermes prediction of 17% fall does seem in the right ballpark.
It does then seem rather at odds with the official figures of continuing population growth in Dubai, with Dubai actually passing Abu Dhabi in size despite being much harder hit by the credit crunch. It would be interesting to know exactly how they arrive at the official figures, to see if they are maybe missing something. Because everywhere I go, I see fewer people, empty flats, less traffic, etc.
Posted by Skeptic on 6 August 2009 at 09:22 UAE time
2 conflicting headlines in as many days -
1. UAE Population will hit 5m for first time this year
2. UAE construction, real estate staff down by up to 35%
?????????????????
Posted by Ramesh, Dubai, UAE on 6 August 2009 at 09:12 UAE time
Its been a complete turnaround of things in the past 10 months,,,,,,job cuts across the board in the property and construction sector.
In UAE property and real estate business is like the front page of the magazine,,,,,if the front cover and page is not good, then imagine the contents of the book and the temptation to read the book by the buyers.....
The front page was phenomenal during years 2000 to year 2008 and then this crisis hit uae and the world......
Lets hope it ends soon,,,, so that lower middle class people are back to earning their bread and butter.
Rich and the super rich will not feel it that much,,,, but always the very poor , poor and the lower middle class suffer too much during such times.
Hope for the BEST AND ALWAYS BE READY FOR THE WORST TO COME AND HIT YOU.