Breaking the Barriers to Higher Economic Growth: Better Governance and Deeper Reforms in the Middle East and North AfricaWorld Bank Publications, 2007 M01 1 - 500 pages The world's attention to the countries of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region has often been dominated by headline issues: conflict, sanctions, political turmoil, and rising oil prices. Little of this international attention has considered the broad range of development challenges facing this diverse group of countries. Breaking the Barriers reflects the collected thinking of the World Bank's Office of the Chief Economist for the MENA Region on the long-term development challenges facing the region and the reform priorities and strategies for effectively meeting these challenges. It. |
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Page 8
... Arab countries include members of the League of Arab States except Comoros , Djibouti , Mauritania , Somalia , and Sudan . East Asia and Pacific High - Income OECD Latin America. 8 Breaking the Barriers to Higher Economic Growth.
... Arab countries include members of the League of Arab States except Comoros , Djibouti , Mauritania , Somalia , and Sudan . East Asia and Pacific High - Income OECD Latin America. 8 Breaking the Barriers to Higher Economic Growth.
Page 11
... OECD Latin America South Asia and the Caribbean Sub - Saharan Arab States Africa Note : Arab States include all MENA countries except Iran , plus Sudan . 1. The material draws on the diagnosis and conclusions from. Part I : Growth ...
... OECD Latin America South Asia and the Caribbean Sub - Saharan Arab States Africa Note : Arab States include all MENA countries except Iran , plus Sudan . 1. The material draws on the diagnosis and conclusions from. Part I : Growth ...
Page 95
... OECD South Asia Sub- World Saharan Average Africa other things equal , would be expected to be better able to influence govern- ment policy . Likewise , the more concentrated the manufacturing sector , in terms of a few export ...
... OECD South Asia Sub- World Saharan Average Africa other things equal , would be expected to be better able to influence govern- ment policy . Likewise , the more concentrated the manufacturing sector , in terms of a few export ...
Page 107
... (OECD) countries have been consistently democratic, other regions in the world were traditionally not very democratic ... OECD countries increased steadily until 1988, when the average OECD Polity index reached its high plateau. At that ...
... (OECD) countries have been consistently democratic, other regions in the world were traditionally not very democratic ... OECD countries increased steadily until 1988, when the average OECD Polity index reached its high plateau. At that ...
Page 108
... OECD other developing countries 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 was almost 17.5 points , or 88 percent of the scale . Since then the gap between MENA and the OECD countries has declined as gradual progress toward democratization ...
... OECD other developing countries 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 was almost 17.5 points , or 88 percent of the scale . Since then the gap between MENA and the OECD countries has declined as gradual progress toward democratization ...
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Common terms and phrases
Algeria Arab region average calculations competitiveness costs debt democracy democratic developing countries Djibouti domestic East and North East Asia economic growth economic reforms effect Egypt employment Equation estimated exchange rate regimes factors Figure fixed exchange rate foreign formal sector GDP growth GDP per capita global growth rate higher human capital impact important improved income increase indicators industrial policy informal sector infrastructure International International Monetary Fund investment climate Iran Jordan labor force labor market Latin America macroeconomic manufactured exports MENA countries MENA economies MENA region ment Middle East migration misalignment Morocco Nabli nonoil North Africa OECD output overvaluation percent of GDP political private investment private sector production public capital public sector ratio real exchange rate reduced result Saudi Arabia Source structural reforms Syria Table tion Tunisia unskilled labor urban formal variables wage Washington workers World Bank Yemen ΜΕΝΑ
Popular passages
Page 456 - ... strength and expertise to govern without drastic changes in policy or interruptions in government services...
Page 106 - Schumpeter (1950, p. 269) defined democracy in terms of electoral competition: "the democratic method is that institutional arrangement for arriving at political decisions in which individuals acquire the power to decide by means of a competitive struggle for the people
Page 418 - This statistic has a %2 distribution with degrees of freedom equal to the number of restrictions in the system, which is in turn equal to one times the number of lags.
Page 427 - ... the respect of citizens and the state for the institutions that govern economic and social interactions among them" (Kaufmann, Kraay and Zoido-Lobaton, 2002: 4-5).
Page 457 - ... 12. Is there equality of opportunity, which includes freedom from exploitation by or dependency on landlords, employers, union leaders, bureaucrats or any other type of denigrating obstacle to a share of legitimate economic gains?
Page 429 - Law" subcomponent provides an "assessment of the strength and impartiality of the legal system," while the "Order" subcomponent concerns the "popular observance of the law.
Page 458 - ... actual or potential impact on governance. The highest rating is given to those countries ". . . where there is no armed opposition to the government and the government does not indulge in arbitrary violence, direct or indirect, against its own people." The lowest rating is given to a country embroiled in an ongoing civil war and/or facing terrorist attacks.
Page 457 - ... 3. Are there free trade unions and peasant organizations or equivalents, and is there effective collective bargaining? Are there free professional and other private organizations?
Page 456 - Is there protection from police terror, unjustified imprisonment, exile, or torture, whether by groups that support or oppose the system? Is there freedom from war and insurgencies?
Page 457 - Do the people have the right to organize in different political parties or other competitive political groupings of their choice, and is the system open to the rise and fall of these competing parties or groupings?