<p><span>To what degree are trade liberalization, productivity, and economic growth correlated? Can economic policies designed to encourage competition and curtail industry protection result in large-scale improvements, such as increased innovation and reduced unemployment?</span></p><p><span>After
Market Dynamics and Productivity in Developing Countries: Economic Reforms in the Middle East and North Africa
β Scribed by Khalid Sekkat (auth.), Khalid Sekkat (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag New York
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 174
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
To what degree are trade liberalization, productivity, and economic growth correlated? Can economic policies designed to encourage competition and curtail industry protection result in large-scale improvements, such as increased innovation and reduced unemployment?
After 20 years of economic reform in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), economic performance is still lagging behind many regions of the world. Even in those countries that are the most advanced in implementing reforms, including Egypt, Jordan, Morocco and Tunisia, industries with low productivity growth and high market power continue to dominate. Moreover, the termination of the Multi-Fiber Agreement and the negotiations concerning further liberalization of trade in agricultural products (under the framework of the World Trade Organization) put these and other countries under pressure of fierce competition from emerging nations.
Recent empirical evidence on the impact of reforms in a number of developing countries shows that such persistence of inefficiency and market power is specific to MENA. Showcasing in-depth analyses from Jordan, Morocco, Tunisia, and Turkey (with comparative data from Asia and Latin America), this book focuses on the dynamics of firm entry and exit to help explain the low productivity of the region. The results suggest a number of policy recommendations designed to foster competition, which, in turn, would contribute to innovation, productivity growth, and improved return on capital investments. The book not only reveals important correlations among policy and market factors in MENA, but suggests fruitful areas of research in other developing regions of the world.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-ix
Reforms, Market Dynamics and Productivity in Developing Countries....Pages 1-11
ExitβEntry Dynamics: Case of the Manufacturing Sector in Jordan....Pages 13-43
Industrial Dynamics and Productivity in Morocco: A Quantitative Assessment....Pages 45-72
Entry, Exit, and Productivity in Tunisian Manufacturing Industries....Pages 73-108
Entry, Exit and Productivity in Turkish Manufacturing Industries....Pages 109-143
Economic Policies, Firmsβ Entry and Exit and Economic Performance: A Cross Country Analysis....Pages 145-166
Back Matter....Pages 167-169
β¦ Subjects
Economic Growth; Economic Policy; Development Economics; International Economics
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>Globalization and changing political economies in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) are affecting women's labor-force participation, educational attainment, and access to economic resources. But are these changes in fact resulting in economic gains for women? And will this produce an intens
MENA is one of the least globally and regionally integrated regions in the world. Though home to 5.5 percent of the worldΒs population and 3.9 percent of the worldΒs GDP, the regionΒs share of nonoil world trade is only 1.8 percent. Deep economic integration could help policy makers address the crit