首页
登录
职称英语
If you want to see what it takes to set up an entirely new financial center (a
If you want to see what it takes to set up an entirely new financial center (a
游客
2023-12-16
47
管理
问题
If you want to see what it takes to set up an entirely new financial center (and what is best avoided), head for Dubai. This flay, sun-baked patch of sand in the midst of a war-tom and isolated region started with few advantages other than a long tradition as a hub for Middle Eastern trade mutes.
But over the past few years Dubai has built a new financial center from nothing. Dozens of the world’s leading financial institutions have opened offices in its new financial district, hoping to grab a portion of the $2 trillion-plus investment from the Gulf. Some say there is more hype than business, but few big firms m willing to risk missing out.
Dealmaking in Dubai centers around The Gate, a cube-shaped structure at the heart of the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC). A brainchild of the ruling Al-Maktoum family, the DIFC is a tax-free zone for wholesale financial services. Firms licensed for it are not approved to serve the local financial market. The DIFC aims to become the leading wholesale financial centre in the Gulf, offering one-stop shopping for everything from stocks to sukuk (Islamic) bonds, investment banking and insurance. In August the Dubai bourse made a bid for a big stake in OMX, a Scandinavian exchange operator that also sells trading technology to many of the world’s exchanges.
Dubai may have generated the biggest splash thus far, but much of the Gulf region has seen a surge of activity in recent years. Record flows of petrodollars have enabled governments in the area to spend billions on infrastructure projects and development. Personal wealth too is growing rapidly. According to Capgemini and Merrill Lynch, the number of people in the Middle East with more than $1m in financial assets rose by nearly 12% last year, to 300,000.
Qatar, Bahrain and Abu Dhabi also have big aspirations for their financial hubs, though they keep a lower profile than Dubai. They, too, are trying to learn from more established financial centers what they must do to achieve the magic mix of transparent regulation, good infrastructure and low or no taxes. Some of the fiercest competition among them is for talent. Most English-speaking professionals have to be imported.
Each of the Gulf hubs, though, has its own distinct characteristics. Abu Dhabi is trying to present itself as a more cultured, less congested alternative to neighboring Dubai, and is building a huge Guggenheim museum. Energy-rich Qatar is an important hub for infrastructure finance, with ambitions to develop further business in wealth management, private equity, retail banking and insurance. Bahrain is well established in Islamic banking, but it is facing new competition from London, Kuala Lumpur and other hubs that have caught on to Islamic finance. "If you’ve got one siring to your bow and suddenly someone takes it away, you’re in trouble," says Stuart Pearce of the Qatar Financial Centre about Bahrain
Saudi Arabia, by far the biggest economy in the Gulf, is creating a cluster of its own economic zones, including King Abdullah City, which is aimed at foreign investors seeking a presence in the country. Trying to cut down on the number of "suitcase bankers" who fly in from nearby centers rather than live in the country, the Saudis now require firms working with them to have local business licenses. Yet the bulk of the region’s money is still flowing to established financial centers in Europe, America and other parts of Asia.
The financial hubs there offer lessons for aspiring centers in other parts of the developing world. Building the confidence of financial markets takes more than new skyscrapers, tax breaks and incentives. The DIFC, for instance, initially suffered from suspicions of government meddling and from a high turnover among senior executives. Trading on its stock market remains thin, and the government seems unwilling to float its most successful companies there. Making the desert bloom was never easy. [br] By saying "making the desert bloom was never easy" in the last paragraph, the author means
选项
A、new skyscrapers need to be built to guarantee the confidence of financial markets.
B、cutting on taxes and giving more incentives brings the confidence of financial markets.
C、the government is trying to bring the confidence of financial markets down.
D、it takes great efforts to build the confidence and prosperity of financial markets.
答案
D
解析
从最后一段以及前文的描述不难总结出,建立金融市场的信心仅仅靠建几座摩天大楼、减税及政策性激励是不够的,它需要多方面的努力,应选D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3278320.html
相关试题推荐
OnwhichofthefollowingstreetsisthefinancialcentreoftheUSlocated?A、Fl
MesaVerdeisthecenteroftheprehistoricAnasaziculture.Itislocatedin
MesaVerdeisthecenteroftheprehistoricAnasaziculture.Itislocatedin
OncefoundalmostentirelyinthewesternUnitedStatesandinAsia,dinosaur
Moreandmore,theoperationsof’ourbusinesses,governments,andfinancial
Moreandmore,theoperationsof’ourbusinesses,governments,andfinancial
Moreandmore,theoperationsof’ourbusinesses,governments,andfinancial
OncefoundalmostentirelyinthewesternUnitedStatesandinAsia,dinosaur
OncefoundalmostentirelyinthewesternUnitedStatesandinAsia,dinosaur
OncefoundalmostentirelyinthewesternUnitedStatesandinAsia,dinosaur
随机试题
[originaltext]M:WelcometoBritain.MayIseeyourpassportandpapers,please
甲、乙两人独立地向同一目标射击,甲、乙两人击中目标的概率分别为0.8, 0.5
简支梁受分布荷载作用如图所示。支座A、B的约束力为:
根尖发育完成的恒牙最容易并发牙髓坏死的外伤类型是A.嵌入性脱位 B.突出性脱位
根据《期货交易管理条例》,下列哪些情况属于违法违规行为?()A、单独或者合谋,
绿色金融的意义包括()。A.发展绿色金融能带来经济效益 B.更好满足各利益相关
A.肾上腺皮质束状带B.肾上腺皮质网状带C.肾上腺皮质球状带D.肾上腺髓质E.垂
某混凝土试块强度值不满足规范要求,但经法定检测单位对混凝土实体强度经过法定检测后
从所给的四个选项中,选择最合适的一个填入问号处,使之呈现一定的规律性:
借款人在偿还个人住房贷款时,贷款支付方式可以同时采取委托扣款和柜面还款两种方式
最新回复
(
0
)