DUBAI, June 29 (Reuters): Rampant consumerism in the United Arab Emirates -- home to Dubai, the self-styled capital of conspicuous consumption -- could damage the economy and hinder the Gulf oil producer's efforts to become self-reliant, a government report said.
Consumer spending in the second-largest Arab economy jumped 17.7 per cent to 319.87 billion dirhams ($87.1 billion) in 2007, more than double its level five years earlier, the Abu Dhabi Department of Planning and Economy said in a report.
Per capita spending in the country of 4.1 million people is about $27 a day, some eight times higher than average daily spending in the rest of the Arab world, the department said, adding that the UAE imported about 85 per cent of consumer goods.
"The expansion of consumer spending at the expense of savings and investments has, and will continue to have, adverse effects on the local economy," the department said.
"This alarming consumption rate could, in the future, constitute a big hurdle in the face of any plans to transform the country from being a consuming to a producing nation."
In Abu Dhabi, the UAE capital, families spend about 60 per cent of their monthly salaries, according to a survey conducted last year, the department said.
The world's fifth-largest oil exporter has been investing windfall revenue from a seven-fold rise in oil prices since 2002 to diversify its economy away from a reliance on oil, building infrastructure, financial services and real estate.
Dubai, home to palm frond-shaped islands and a mall featuring an indoor ski slope, has become a business and retail hub, known across the region for boasting designer fashion labels and holding an annual Dubai Shopping Festival that attracts flocks of regional tourists.
"Some of the woes that have beset the UAE's economy have to do with this pervasive culture of consumer spending," the department said.
The consumer culture has led to "hidden poverty" in the country, "where a certain segment of the society seek to possess luxurious items at the expense of essential goods," it said.