The economy of Ras Al Khaimah (RAK) has continued to expand, and while final year-end 2012 figures for growth have yet to be released, officials say they are confident that the forecast 8% increase in GDP – the same rate as in 2011 – will have been achieved in the emirate.

This confidence was supported in late December when ratings agency Standard and Poor’s (S&P) affirmed its “A/A-1” long- and short-term foreign and local currency sovereign credit ratings for RAK. The agency said the rating was a reflection of the government's minimal expenditure responsibilities, prudent fiscal policy and ongoing indirect financial support from the central government of the UAE.

Fiscally, RAK was well protected against external shocks thanks to the UAE’s strong external balances and its system of fiscal transfers and banking coordination, according to S&P. Meanwhile, the emirate’s only domestic bank, RAK Bank, was cushioned from risk by being under the supervisory oversight of the Central Bank of the UAE. Looking forward, S&P said that the outlook for RAK was stable, thanks to the government’s fiscal flexibility and the advantages being in the UAE.

The industrial sector maintained its position as one of the leading contributors to the economy, with an input of around 30% to GDP. In August French firm Saverglass announced that it would be investing $93m to build a new production facility in RAK, joining at least three other major manufacturers of glass products based in the emirate.

Along with the ceramics sector, led by RAK Ceramics, which is recognised as the world’s largest ceramics manufacturer and the first regional ceramics firm to produce 1bn sq metres of tiles, the glass sector benefits from the easily accessible and competitively priced raw materials provided by the emirate’s mining industry. This sector also feeds RAK’s cement producers, who witnessed a rebound in 2012 as building activity in the UAE and across the Gulf began to pick up, pointing toward a recovery from the downturn brought on by the global financial crisis.

The emirate’s tourism sector also enjoyed a good year, with visitor numbers up and a surge in hotel construction to meet expected future demand. The RAK Tourism Development Authority estimates that up to 1.2m visitors will arrive in 2013, up from 835,000 in 2011, while the existing room stock will be expanded from just below 3000 to 10,000 by 2016.

This increase in tourist trade has in part been facilitated by the expansion of the emirate’s flag carrier, RAK Airways, which conducted a programme of route expansion during 2012 by adding four destinations and increasing the frequency of services on a number of existing routes. This was achieved in part through a code share arrangement struck with Etihad Airways in September.

In mid-December RAK Airways also announced it was expanding its domestic services to Abu Dhabi to include a daily flight, up from its four flights a week since it was re-launched in October 2012. The carrier has said it intends to lift flight numbers to twice a day in 2013 in anticipation of higher demand. The service, as the first domestic route in the UAE, has helped boost passenger numbers for RAK Airways; the airline has seen a 47% increase in seats sold as of the end of November.

For more on this Click Here


Oxford Business Group

Ticker Price Volume
SABIC 114.77 5,915,941
SAMBA 26.98 1,138,683
Tourism to the Kingdom is about to soar — and the sky is the limit for aviation

In January this year, the Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage announced that regulations were being finalized for the much-anticipated visas that will, for the first time, allow foreig

The energy mix is about getting the balance right

Complementary, not competitive — this ethos must be etched into the global energy playbook. Sleeves must be pulled up to ensure that the BP Outlook’s forecast of a 49 per cent increase in energy cons

Dubai’s property market toys with crypto possibilities

Would you settle your rents using a crypto currency? Or buy that freehold apartment in Dubai by shelling out a few Bitcoins?

With the volatile ride Bitcoin’s having of late, much of it spent

Goodbye oil, Saudi Arabia's future economic growth will come from its mega-cities

Saudi Arabia's economy is entering a post-oil era in which the kingdom's mega-cities, a number of which are under construction, will provide the country's future growth, Riyadh officials told CNBC on

Oman: Year in Review 2017

Stronger oil prices offset lower energy production in Oman, as the government moved to accelerate fiscal reforms and broaden its revenue base.

Oil output fell 3.7% year-on-year (y-o-y) in th