Abu Dhabi To Pay For UAE Pension Hike
Khouri also said the total cost of the hike would be paid by the emirate of Abu Dhabi, adding that the Ministry of Finance would implement the increase effective from the end of January.
January 4, 2012 3:56 by Reuters
The emirate of Abu Dhabi will pay the cost of the United Arab Emirates’ decision to hike minimum pensions of former military and federal government employees to 10,000 dirhams ($2,700) per month, a senior government official was quoted as saying on Wednesday.
The number of beneficiaries of the hike, granted by President Sheikh Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahayan on Monday, will exceed 7,000, Younis al-Khouri, undersecretary and director general at the UAE finance ministry, told Arabic language daily al-Bayan.
Khouri also said the total cost of the hike would be paid by the emirate of Abu Dhabi, adding that the Ministry of Finance would implement the increase effective from the end of January.
State news agency WAM reported the hike on Monday but did not state the reasons behind the move, the previous size of the pensions, or the number of pensioners benefitting.
Abu Dhabi, the richest of the UAE’s seven emirates, accounts for over half its economic output and provided at least $10 billion in aid to Dubai to help repair the damage of Dubai’s debt crisis in 2009.
More on GCC
-
Kuwaiti Oil Service Workers On Strike Over Pay – Union
-
Qatar’s Doha Bank May Sell Bonds To Raise Capital – CEO
-
Qatar to announce new energy infrastructure fund
-
Qatar Holding, Italy Fund Eying Versace – Paper
-
Saudi government websites targeted
-
NCoV – First report of patient-to-nurse spread
-
Saudi regulations target stock market speculators
-
Dubai’s Arqaam Capital Eyes South Africa, Saudi Expansion
-
U.S. Targets Two UAE Firms For Dealing With Blacklisted Iran Banks
-
Airbus officially picked by Kuwait Airways
-
GMR reveals top 50 Mena Corporate Brands
-
Kuwait Airways to sign $3 billion-plus Airbus deal
-
Abu Dhabi Tourism Company Loss Widens
-
Emirates Airline reaps expansion profits
-
Saudi Arabia has 13 cases of SARS-like Coronavirus – WHO
-
UAE Central Bank Shuts Two Money Exchange Firms For Violations
-
Emal plans further expansion
-
Dubai looking at alternatives to repay debt
-
Two more die in Saudi Arabia from SARS-like virus – WHO
-
Alwaleed’s Kingdom on the prowl
Lately on Kipp
-
First report by Etisalat covering global footprint
-
Qatar Should Consider More Flexible Exchange Rate – Central Banker
-
Kuwaiti Oil Service Workers On Strike Over Pay – Union
-
Qatar’s Doha Bank May Sell Bonds To Raise Capital – CEO
-
Yahoo on Tumblr: ‘we promise not to screw it up’
-
Sourcefire Delivers Unprecedented Visibility And Tracking Of Malware
































