As global competition for artificial intelligence leadership intensifies, the United Arab Emirates is taking decisive steps into a new phase of nation-building—one where AI moves beyond enabling growth to becoming the central engine of economic competitiveness.
This white paper, The Blueprint for an AI-First Nation, developed by MIT Sloan Management Review Middle East in collaboration with duTech, explores the country’s bold, long-term, and deeply intentional strategy. It outlines how the UAE aims to convert early AI enthusiasm into a large-scale, sustained impact.
A Region Racing Toward AI Dominance
AI has rapidly become the defining competition for Middle Eastern economies. IDC forecasts show AI spending in the Middle East, Türkiye, and Africa soaring from $4.5 billion in 2024 to $14.6 billion by 2028—a sign of how aggressively regional governments are investing to secure technological relevance. The UAE, however, is pursuing a differentiated model: instead of depending solely on state-driven scale, it has built an agile ecosystem through global partnerships, regulatory clarity, and sovereign infrastructure.
This approach is reflected in the major technology alliances highlighted in the white paper, from du’s collaboration with Microsoft on contact center AI to national investments that will support supercomputing clusters, such as Stargate UAE. Together, these initiatives signal a shift toward positioning the UAE as a global hub for AI deployment, research, and commercialization
Inside the UAE’s AI Strategy 2031
The UAE’s National AI Strategy 2031 outlines a unified, cross-sector roadmap designed to elevate the country to global leadership in AI. At its core is a projected economic return of AED 335 billion, driven by productivity gains, cost efficiencies, and the emergence of new AI-enabled industries.
The strategy has eight pillars, ranging from building AI talent pipelines to ensuring strong governance frameworks that reflect a national vision centred on innovation and global competitiveness.
Key economic sectors, including finance, mobility, energy, and manufacturing, stand to benefit. Examples include Dubai’s 81 AI-powered transport initiatives and AI-native decision systems in government. These advances demonstrate how national policy, business ambition, and technological capability are converging.