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Social infrastructure drives progress, and the UAE is taking the lead

Social infrastructure drives progress, and the UAE is taking the lead

Khaleej Times6 days ago

The country is modernising procurement and embracing digital platforms,ensuring efficient, transparent delivery of critical healthcare, education, and community services
Dubai's shimmering skyline is a testament to what visionary infrastructure can achieve. But the UAE's most transformative opportunity today lies not only in its skyscrapers or airports, but in the everyday spaces that shape community life, such as in schools, hospitals, public spaces and community hubs.
With the UAE's population growing at an accelerated rate of 4% annually, and approximately 88% of the population residing in urban areas, the demand for healthcare, education, and community services is surging. The country's rapidly expanding youthful demographic, with a median age of just 35.8, further amplifies this need. Social infrastructure is quickly emerging as the nation's opportunity to take the next great leap forward.
In October 2024, the UAE Cabinet approved a balanced Dh71.5 billion federal budget for 2025, and almost 40% of that budget was allocated to social development, with education accounting for the majority of spending in that sector, followed by healthcare.
Dubai's 2040 Urban Master Plan will increase land allocation for educational and healthcare facilities by 25%, ensuring tomorrow's communities have access to essential services close to where they live. Meanwhile, newly introduced federal legislation on Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) in 2024 provides a modern, investor-friendly framework to accelerate social infrastructure delivery. These reforms underscore a broader shift: one that sees liveability, inclusion and resilience as pillars of national competitiveness.
New insights from Ansarada's Social Infrastructure Outlook 2025 align with this momentum. Insights from the report, developed in partnership with Infralogic, predict a 25% rise in project activity across the Middle East by 2027, pushing annual transaction values to an estimated US$2 billion. Already, the UAE has committed more than Dh27 billion (US$7.4 billion) to upgrade and expand its social infrastructure footprint.
These figures are encouraging, yet they spotlight the one process that has the potential to slow momentum: procurement. Traditional procurement processes often rely on sprawling email threads, unsecured document transfers, and cumbersome spreadsheets, which can significantly delay project delivery. If the UAE is to fully unlock the potential of social infrastructure, a smarter and more innovative path from concept to contract is essential.
Digital, transparent and standardised procurement systems are critical. By modernising procurement, the UAE can reduce delivery risk, fast-track approvals, and strengthen investor confidence. Digital procurement platforms can automate compliance, reduce risk, enhance transparency, and accelerate deal flow. In short, they turn procurement into an engine of innovation, not an obstacle to it.
The future of the UAE
The UAE is uniquely positioned to move into this next phase of societal growth. It has the vision, the capital, the regulatory framework, and a clear demographic mandate. What remains is to match the scale of ambition with the processes needed.
Social infrastructure is more than steel and concrete. It's about enabling people to thrive through education, healthcare, housing, and community. By embracing digital delivery tools and prioritising smarter procurement, the UAE can ensure its next chapter of growth is defined not only by what it builds, but by how its people thrive within it.

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