Page 189 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 189

Chapter Five
                  The Traditional Economies







                  1 General
                 The development of the one major natural resource, petroleum, found
                  within the territory of the Trucial Slates depended on people and
                 technologies imported from abroad; this together with the flow of oil
                 revenues produced an instantaneous increase in the area’s capacity
                 to accommodate a rapidly-growing immigrant population. This
                 radical change is in stark contrast to the period immediately
                 preceding the discovery and export of oil. The estimates of the
                 population figures in all the Trucial States in the first half of the
                 1950s show a decrease in numbers of almost every tribe and coastal
                 settlement as compared to the figures in the Gazetteer. The obvious
                 reason was the emigration of many of the able-bodied men to
                 neighbouring countries where they found work. The underlying
                 cause of this exodus was, given the lack of natural resources other
                 than pearls, the decline in this industry hastened by the opportu­
                 nities for men to work in the oil industry of neighbouring countries.
                 There was no alternative source of income for them at home. The
                 effects of the decline of the pearling industry since the 1930s show
                 how delicate the balance was between the local resources and the
                 number of people who could live off them.
                   The traditional economies of the region had not been static for
                 centuries, and there was a considerable movement within the society.
                 During the 18th and early 19th century, communications with India
                 improved considerably, opening greater opportunities to sell pearls
                 in this expanding market. Also the Perpetual Treaty of Peace signed
                 in 1853 meant that pearling communities could pursue their seasonal
                 occupation in greater security. A number of local factors combined to
                 decrease the percentage of predominantly nomadic families and to

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