The first was China, and in fact the ancient capital Xi'an -- home to the Terracotta Warriors and Horses, and a city for a mere 5000 years or so, depending on when you start counting. As expected it is a city of great history, however for a country of over 1.3 billion people Xi'an is relatively small with around 3 million people in the city proper.
Xi'an is now a modern city on a par with most in the world. Despite it being smaller and inland, the economic miracle that is China makes Xi'an a comfortable, albeit bustling city.A Customer visit brought me to Xi'an and the exciting part was that we joined our Customer (in the Consumer Cleaning and Personal Care products business) on a visit to a local supermarket and to a Consumer's home to see the products in action. The supermarket had the feel of a large European multi-level store that, language aside, most readers would find very familiar. Not unsurprising I guess.
The home visit to a middle class apartment was fascinating. The compact apartment was essential a modern blend of China meets western, except that the TV, Refrigerator, and Washing Machine were all bigger and/or better technology that the new ones in our apartment back in HK! The lady of the house was very gracious in explaing how she uses her cleaning products and what she likes and what needs to be improved. A great and invaluable morning of learnings.
This week I have been in Dubai, again for work. My, this city has continued to boom in the years since my last visit, and it really is something to see. Perhaps something like "Singapore of the Middle East meets Las Vegas" (without the Casinos). It is bold and confident, and a wonderful example of what a modern Middle East could become. I guess most readers only hear of the "big" things in Dubai, like the soon to be completed Burj Dubai which is outside my hotel window. It is alrady the tallest building in teh world at over 2300 feet, and when completed next year will be at least 2800 feet (the actual height is still a secret). An incredible engineering feet and I think it is quite an attractive building.
So I guess there are a few that question "why bigger?". Well, my spin on this is that it is simply Dubai letting the world know it has arrived, and that it can match it with the big boys. It seems to me that all of the established countries did this in past centuries with their monuments, building, bridges, and the like. It is now just the turn of China and the Middle East (or should I say the RETURN, since China has it's Great Wall, Forbidden City, Warriors, etc, and the Middle East built five of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World).It was an interesting week to be in Dubai as the world financial markets went to pieces and an impending world recession faced a modern UAE economy that has never seen one before. Predictably folks are cautious but optimistic. The are well positioned to ride it out in a better fashion than many, and the Government here seems to be taking a very active and responsible approach to addressing the issues.
Dubai is a real melting pot in terms of local Arabs, folks from the surrounding Persian Gulf and South Asia regions, and a large international expat community. Despite the speed of growth and the mix of cultures, everyone I met was warm and very proud of their Dubai. And it was great to bump into some folks that knew what cricket was as well !
Well that's it for now. Cheers.
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