The National - News

MENA STATES URGED TO LIFT GROWTH BY STEPPING UP REFORMS

▶ World Bank chief economist says region is evolving in the digital age

- MASSOUD A DERHALLY

Middle East and North African government­s need to increase the momentum of reform, accelerate economic liberalisa­tion, check monopolies and nurture a competitiv­e environmen­t that strengthen­s the private sector to boost growth and developmen­t, the World Bank’s chief economist for the region said.

The urgency of ushering in change at a faster pace is all the more compelling given the advent of the digital age and a growing population, where in some countries more than 60 per cent of citizens are under the age of 31. By 2050, there will be 300 million additional people coming into the labour market, and most Mena countries will double in size, according to World Bank data.

“Mena is not evolving in a vacuum, it’s a region that is relatively well integrated,” Rabah Arezki, the World Bank’s chief economist for the Middle East and North Africa region told The

National in Washington. “So it needs to balance that sense of recreating the private sector as a genuine force for developmen­t. It needs to do that at the national level. But it also needs to develop a strategy at the more regional and global level.

“This tells you that there is an opportunit­y, markets are getting bigger, creating the momentum for [a] productive domestic sector. All that is a potential for the region to ... create more momentum,” added Mr Arezki. “But that cannot happen if we don’t have a conducive, competitiv­e environmen­t free of distortion ... de-monopolisa­tion, democratis­ing the economy, leveraging technology.”

The region’s adoption of technology, the mushroomin­g of start-ups and on emerging entreprene­urship environmen­t are positive developmen­ts but not enough, said Mr Arezki. Government­s should double down on the momentum of reform and open up economies as the region has a legacy of monopolies in the public and private sectors, he said.

“What we need for the region is a Sherman Act-like moment, a moment where we say monopolisa­tion of the economy or attempts at monopolisi­ng the economy is a crime,” Mr Arezki said. The Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 is a US law that regulates competitio­n among enterprise­s and makes it unlawful for entities to gain monopoly power.

“We have great stories of technology start-ups emerging,” Mr Arzeki said. “That momentum is there, and young people are grabbing technology and getting at it. What is less well is the path with which we are transition­ing and fostering that momentum that technology and the youth spirit brought,” he added. “This is precisely the time ... the moment where we can grab that adjustment and macro-stabilisat­ion and take it to a new level.

“That’s not going as fast as it should. This is a critical juncture, there is a kind of a baton that needs to be passed from the macro-adjustment to the deeper reform and the speed of that is not fast enough.”

Growth in the region is tapering off. Last week, the World Bank revised the regional economic growth forecast to an average 0.6 per cent this year, a 0.8 percentage point drop from its April forecast. Growth in the Mena region is forecast to rise to 2.6 per cent in 2020 and 2.9 per cent in 2021.

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