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This book identifies the differences in growth and development, and
the various factors lying behind them, across both Middle East and
North African (MENA) and East Asian countries over the 1960-2020
period. It considers a very wide range of factors, compares initial
situations, institutions, and government policies, the dynamic
responses to changing circumstances, and discusses the inability of
the governments of the MENA region to achieve not only political
reform, but also the kinds of economic reform that would allow
their citizens to prosper in an increasingly globalized world. The
book focuses on Tunisia. Since its independence in 1956 until 2010,
Tunisia had considerable success relative to many other MENA
countries, but was somewhat less successful relative to East Asian
countries. Since 2010, however, while transitioning away from
autocracy to democracy, it has been in rather serious economic
decline. The book highlights how both the factors identified as
enabling Tunisia's initial success and those leading to its
subsequent decline can provide many useful insights for improving
the management of economic development across the whole MENA region
and perhaps also to developing countries throughout the world.
This volume distils the thinking of an international group of leading economists on the changing roles of governments and markets in economic and social development. It argues that government has a vital role to play in facilitating the effective functioning of markets, even though the recent tendency has been to withdraw from direct involvement in certain sectors of the economy and to reduce intervention and control in others.
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 is a comprehensive reform agenda to 'break the
barriers' to higher economic growth, to ensure sufficient jobs can
be created for the region's rapidly growing labor force. At its
core, it requires the region's public sector-dominated economies to
move to private sector-driven economies, from closed economies to
more open economies, and from oil-dominated and volatile economies
to more stable and diversified economies. This book examines some
of these reforms and the complex issues surrounding their
successful implementation. In order for the countries of the MENA
region to successfully implement the reforms needed for higher
growth and job creation, they will also need to address the
fundamental weaknesses in governance throughout the region.
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