Khaleej Times

Mena govts should open up and build trust among people

- Ferid Belhaj — Ferid Belhaj is the World Bank Vice-President for the Middle East & North Africa —Asharq Al Awsat

As the coronaviru­s sweeps across the Middle East and North Africa (Mena) region, uncertaint­y and fear are gripping the streets. Citizens are turning to their government­s to act; however, lack of transparen­cy over decades has bred distrust and, in many instances, undermined state credibilit­y. People cannot be certain if daily reporting and updates are true. As someone aptly described the leadership response to the pandemic: “When you lose people’s trust, even when you tell the truth, people won’t believe you.” Government­s need to be reminded of this sad reality.

As if a global pandemic amid social unrest were not enough, more than any other region Mena is confrontin­g two distinct but related shocks. Alongside the spread of the virus, oil prices collapsed. This is putting pressure directly on incomes and fiscal accounts of oil exporters; and it is indirectly, but heavily, affecting the region’s developing economies that rely on worker remittance­s, foreign direct investment, and transfers from high-income neighbours.

As we fight the spread of the virus, policies designed to contain the pandemic, such as generalise­d social distancing, are having at least short-term recessiona­ry consequenc­es with potentiall­y grave economic costs. The World Bank Group is committed to helping countries weather these shocks with financing and expertise, with the intention of leaving no one behind.

We have put together a coronaviru­s emergency financing facility of $14 billion, and are working tirelessly to ramp up our operations. On March 25, President David Malpass committed $160 billion over the next 15 months to finance support operations tailored to the needs of each country, with an emphasis on policy-based financing and protecting the poorest households and the environmen­t. Yet soon, together with our partners in Mena, we will come out of emergency mode. We will need to come out stronger than ever, with a hopeful vision for a brighter future for the region.

To bring new hope to people, we must learn and change. After all, when the virus arrived, the region, and I mean all of it — its leaders, entreprene­urs, educated youth, broader civil society — was already engaged in difficult debates about the past, and the future developmen­t of their countries. All of society seemed to be at stake, from the nature of political systems to technical aspects of social and macroecono­mic policies.

Our new regional economic update contribute­s important details to these debates by examining the importance of government transparen­cy. If there is a single lesson to draw from the pandemic, it is that transparen­cy in public informatio­n can save lives and improve economic outcomes, partly by enhancing societal trust in the state.

Unfortunat­ely, the region has under-performed for years, if not decades, in the transparen­cy department. Mena stands out as the only region that has dropped in data capacity and transparen­cy since 2005, as many countries in the region have either lagged in their ability to generate data or have prevented access to data altogether.

Reliable data and transparen­cy help improve public policies and enhance people’s trust in government. Conversely, lack of data and transparen­cy could be at least partly responsibl­e for the region’s chronic low-growth syndrome. Since the beginning of the 21st century, growth of output per capita across Mena has been lower than what is typical for economies with the same levels of developmen­t. The new report argues that if Mena had grown at the typical rate observed in the rest of the world, the region would be at least 20 per cent richer than it is today.

Our economists also found that lack of transparen­cy hurts even more when systems are under stress by potent threats such as the current pandemic. The region’s declining data transparen­cy has resulted in losses of income per person ranging between 7 per cent and 14 per cent. So, it is plausible that the lion’s share

Mena stands out as the only region that has dropped in data capacity and transparen­cy since 2005, as many countries have either lagged in their ability to generate data or have prevented access to data altogether.

of income losses during the 21st century have been due to lack of transparen­cy.

It is difficult to think of more important, long-term challenges for Mena than raising the pace of economic growth, solving fiscal vulnerabil­ities, and improving the performanc­e of labour markets across the region. Yet, these are areas with missing informatio­n or ambiguous data. This latest research helps shed light in dark corners of crucial policy debates.

The grievances that sparked protests across Mena can only be addressed by rebuilding trust. The coronaviru­s pandemic has put in stark relief what is at stake: Nothing less than human lives and prosperity.

Now, more than ever, a new social contract is needed, and the process of healing starts with transparen­cy and accountabi­lity. More sunlight can help bring a prosperous future to Mena with enhanced societal trust in government and lead to growth and prosperity across the region in the years and decades to come.

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