United Arab Emirates Country Profile
Land Administration
Business Corruption
The biggest corruption scandal to hit UAE has centred on the government owned real estate company Nakheel. Nakheel was in such severe financial difficulties, that the Dubai government had to receive 10 USD billion in aid from Abu Dhabi. Several Nakheel executives have been under investigation since the real estate bubble burst in Dubai, with two executives in 2008 found guilty of accepting bribes, according to a 2010 Financial Times article. Another case Nakheel corruption case, involving five Australians, is currently being heard, but is suffering constant delays, according to a 2009 article in Zawya.
A former executive of the Investment Corporation of Dubai was found guilty in March 2010 of abusing his position as a director of a local developer and sentenced to three years in jail and ordered to pay a fine corresponding to 31 USD million, according to a 2010 Financial Times article.
An investigation of top officials of the Dubai mortgage lender Tamweel was running at the end of 2008. A few days after this case, several other investigations of private and state-owned real estate company employees were opened, which highlighted misappropriation of company funds and financial malfeasance. The investigations eroded market confidence and have consequently been mirrored in the falling prices of real-estate shares on the UAE stock market. In an attempt to restore marked practices the government has started a larger screening of corporate practices related to Dubai's booming real estate market.
Political Corruption
The US Department of State 2011 reports that no property owned by a foreign investor has been expropriated in recent years and that this is not likely to occur in the future, unless very compelling reasons should force authorities to do so. No regulations with regard to expropriation exist in the UAE, but it is stated that should it occur, compensation would probably be generous.
Frequency
The World Bank & IFC: Doing Business 2011:
- Registering property in the UAE requires a company to go through 1 administrative step, taking an average of 2 days at a cost of 2% the property value.
- These figures are lower than both the regional and OECD corresponding averages.
World Economic Forum: The Global Competitiveness Report 2010-2011:
- Business executives give the protection of property rights in the UAE, including financial assets, a score of 5.0 on a 7-point scale (1 being 'very weak' and 7 'very strong' with the average of the 139 countries covered being 4.4).





