A day after signing tax treaty, Israel to open economic office in UAE

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  • Abu Dhabi will host an Israeli economic office to strengthen economic ties

  • The announcement comes a day after the UAE and Israel signed a tax treaty

 

Just a day after it signed a tax treaty with the United Arab Emirates, Israel said it would open an “economic attaché office” in Abu Dhabi in the coming weeks in order to encourage foreign investment and give a boost to economic ties between Israel and the broader Arab world, according to the country’s Economic Ministry.

This follows a US-brokered normalization of ties between Israel and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) last September that has led to a number of bilateral banking deals and direct flights between the two countries.

On Monday, an Emirati embassy opened in Tel Aviv while Israel’s Finance Ministry said Israel and the United Arab Emirates signed a tax treaty to spur business development between the countries.
Economy Minister Amir Peretz said he saw “enormous economic potential” in strengthening Israeli-Emirati relations.

“Opening the economic attaché office will give a significant boost to the various initiatives already underway,” Peretz added. Israel’s Foreign Trade Administration (FTA), a part of the Economy Ministry, operates in more than 50 business centers around the world. It opened a branch in Manila last year. Aviad Tamir will be the economic attaché in the UAE, the ministry said.

The FTA last year identified significant economic potential for Israel’s economy from relations with the UAE, including strengthening aviation ties between Israel and the Gulf, oil imports, energy solutions, diamond exports, exports of medical equipment water technologies, and exports of financial and cyber security technologies.

The new branches in the UAE “will yield significant returns in light of the great interest arising from Emirates interested in a long line of Israeli technologies as well as in light of the large capital in the UAE that may be translated into significant investments in Israeli economy and industry,” said FTA director Ohad Cohen. Israel has also recently normalized relations with Bahrain.

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