Dubai Crisis Rings Bells of Prudent Investment
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Prevention
Catarivas said Israel has got the mix just about right, which is why the country survived the international financial crisis better than most.
Noting that Israel, like Dubai, has virtually no raw materials, local experts said Israel's success is based on human capital.
Meanwhile, they said that Dubai's decision to move the economy in the direction of luxury villas lacked forethought and long-term feasibility.
In Israel, the high-tech industry may be a major force in the economy, recognized as a world leader, but it is not the only basket. Medical supplies, diamond polishing, agriculture and water technologies all rank high.
In Dubai, it was a very different case. "They thought they could do all this even if they couldn't see money at the end of the tunnel. Every small-time builder knows there is one simple rule, you don't begin building if you don't have buyers," said Melnik.
An economy must be diversified, it should be transparent, and a country's leaders should not plan too ambitiously and thus can avoid overextension, said the leading Israeli economists who spoke to Xinhua over the last few days, among other suggestions they offered to ensure no repeat of the Dubai crisis.
"It's about modesty and caution. There, the bubble was behavioral," suggested Moshe Justman, a professor of economics at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in southern Israel.
Forever bursting bubbles
The Israeli analysts are of the opinion that the Dubai crash will have limited impact on the global stage. However, they cautioned that other crises may be around the corner.
The trouble is how to predict them. "I wanted to call this a million-dollar question, but of course it's worth much more," said Yafeh.
One needs to examine a state's investment portfolio to check whether it is diversified. Then there are the sums involved, said Justman.
There have been bubbles throughout recorded human history, said Yafeh, noting that similar hard times have been occurring for centuries, including the dotcom bubble in recent years.
However, nations tend to survive these difficult moments. The United States may have taken a beating over the last 18 months with the sub-prime crash, but its economy is resilient and large enough to have survived.
Israel and Australia may have growing bubbles right now, but their central banks are playing the game right by adjusting their lending rates accordingly, said Melnik.
At the end of the day, people will view Dubai's financial crisis as nothing more than "a curiosity," according to Yoram Landskroner, an expert on international debt at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. "Dubai has nothing that links it to any group of nations. It's neither a developed state nor an emerging market."
As a result, little can be applied to other countries from the Dubai experience, other than to say that sometimes caution is the better part of valor.
However, in consideration of previous financial crises in emerging economies, it is safe to predict that some potential investors will no longer put their cash in high-risk, low-rated markets and will return to the days when making a small prudent profit was regarded as far more sensible than a rash gamble on a chancy but exotic option.
(Xinhua News Agency December 7, 2009)