July 5, 2022
1 min read

‘UAE to achieve 2.6% GDP growth from recent CEPAs’

The UAE is open to the world’s countries in terms of signing agreements, and those willing to move forward with the agreement signing process will be prioritised…reports Asian Lite News

Dr. Thani bin Ahmed Al Zeyoudi, Minister of State for Foreign Trade, said the comprehensive economic partnership agreements (CEPA) signed by the UAE with India, Israel and Indonesia in the first half of 2022 will help grow the national economy by 2.6 percent by 2030.

In his statement to the Emirates News Agency (WAM), he added that July 2022 will witness the announcement of a CEPA with Colombia.

“After the signing of the CEPA with Indonesia, we now have access to a large market with 1.7 billion people, including 1.4 billion people in India and 280 million in Indonesia, in addition to nearly 10 million people in Israel,” Al Zeyoudi said.

“About a year ago, we spoke about covering markets that account for four billion people from the Far East to West Africa,” he added, stressing that the three CEPAs have opened large markets to achieve national economy’s growth, with preliminary figures pointing out that the first CEPA with India is expected to achieve a 1.7 percent growth in the national economy by 2030 while the CEPA with Indonesia is expected to achieve a 0.87 percent increase,” he said.

ALSO READ:UAE, US boost join hands in combating money laundering

The UAE is open to the world’s countries in terms of signing agreements, and those willing to move forward with the agreement signing process will be prioritised, he further added. This month, the country will sign its fourth CEPA with Colombia and is in negotiations with Turkey.

“We have started the CEPA signing negotiation process with several African and East Asian countries and Georgia. The country is also coordinating with Chile in this regard,” he said in conclusion.

Previous Story

Dubai’s RTA inks deal to trial eco-friendly electric bus

Next Story

Pre-Raphaelite Art accessible at London’s Classic Week Summer edition

Latest from -Top News

US government shuts down, early deal unlikely

A bitter funding clash between President Trump and Democrats has triggered a government shutdown, paralysing services, fuelling partisan blame, and reviving fears of prolonged political dysfunction. The United States has entered a

PLA at 76: The Party’s Army, Not the People’s

At 76 years old, the PLA continues to exemplify how authoritarian regimes pervert military institutions, creating forces that serve narrow political interests rather than constitutional democracy, writes Major General RPS Bhadauria (Retd)

Why China’s National Day is no celebration for Asia

Whilst China’s leadership celebrates another year of Communist rule, Asia’s democracies are tallying the mounting costs of Beijing’s repressive policies at home and aggressive adventurism abroad, writes Colonel Danvir Singh (Retd) As

Trump’s 20 points to peace in Gaza

Trump unveils 20-point Gaza peace plan with Netanyahu’s backing, offering hostages’ release, technocratic rule, and global oversight, as Hamas faces pressure to accept or risk further war. US President Donald Trump has

Trump Urged to Back Baloch Rights in Pakistan

The letter urged President Trump to recognise the Baloch people’s right to self-governance and to raise his voice against the alleged atrocities committed by the Pakistani military…reports Asian Lite News In a
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Dubai’s Beach Boom

His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum has approved

UAE airports passenger traffic surges

The aviation sector in the UAE contributes, directly or indirectly,