Liberia : Inclusive Growth Diagnostics

Liberia aims to achieve middle-income status by 2030 through broad participation and inclusive growth. The Government's growth strategy aims to accelerate growth through the exploitation of natural resources, while maintaining sound macroecono...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Policy Note
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2013
Subjects:
GDP
TFP
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/02/16575286/liberia-inclusive-growth-diagnostics
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12609
id okr-10986-12609
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ABSOLUTE SENSE
AGGREGATE LEVEL
AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
AGRICULTURE
AID DEPENDENCE
AVERAGE INCOMES
AVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY
BASE YEAR
BENCHMARK
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
CAPITAL ACCUMULATION
CAPITAL EXPENDITURES
CAPITAL LEVELS
CAPITAL STOCK
CITIZENS
CIVIL SOCIETY
CIVIL WAR
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPETITIVENESS
COMPLEMENTARY FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT
CORRUPTION
COUNTRY DATA
CREDIT RATIONING
DATA COLLECTION
DATA ISSUES
DEBT
DEPRECIATION OF ASSETS
DETERMINANTS OF GROWTH
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING WORLD
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
DEVELOPMENT GOALS
DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
DEVELOPMENT REPORT
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME
DIVERSIFICATION
DOMESTIC MARKETS
DOMESTIC SAVINGS
DUAL ECONOMY
ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC AFFAIRS
ECONOMIC DECLINE
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC HISTORY
ECONOMIC INSTABILITY
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
ECONOMIC PROGRESS
ECONOMIC SECTORS
ECONOMIC STABILITY
ECONOMIC SYSTEMS
ELECTRICITY SERVICES
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
EMPIRICAL LITERATURE
EMPIRICAL STUDIES
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
EQUAL ACCESS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPECTED RETURNS
EXPORT DIVERSIFICATION
EXPORTS
EXTERNAL SHOCKS
EXTERNALITIES
EXTREME POVERTY
FACTOR ACCUMULATION
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FOREIGN AID
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN INVESTORS
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION
GROSS NATIONAL SAVINGS
GROWTH ACCOUNTING
GROWTH DIAGNOSTICS
GROWTH PATH
GROWTH PERFORMANCE
GROWTH PROCESS
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
GROWTH RESULTS
GROWTH WITHOUT DEVELOPMENT
HIGH GROWTH
HOUSEHOLD DATA
HUMAN CAPITAL
HUMAN RESOURCE
INCOME
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INCOME INEQUALITY
INCOME LEVEL
INCOME SHARE
INDUSTRIAL POLICY
INFORMATION EXTERNALITIES
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INVENTORY
LABOR FORCE
LABOR FORCE GROWTH
LABOR MARKET
LABOR SUPPLY
LAND USE
LITERACY RATES
LIVING STANDARDS
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
LONG RUN
LONG-TERM GROWTH
MACROECONOMIC MANAGEMENT
MACROECONOMIC POLICIES
MARKET FAILURE
MARKET FAILURES
MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES
MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRY
MIGRATION
NATIONAL ACCOUNTS
NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
NATIONAL INCOME
NATURAL CAPITAL
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEGATIVE EFFECT
NET SAVINGS
OUTPUT GROWTH
OUTPUT VOLATILITY
PER CAPITA GROWTH
PER CAPITA INCOME
POLICY ANALYSIS
POLICY ISSUES
POLICY MAKERS
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
POOR COUNTRIES
POPULATION SHARE
POVERTY REDUCTION
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY
PRESENT VALUE
PRIMARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY SCHOOL
PRIVATE SECTOR REPRESENTATIVES
PRO-POOR
PRO-POOR GROWTH
PRODUCTIVITY
PROFITABILITY
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC FINANCES
PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
PUBLIC SECTOR
PUBLIC SERVICES
PUBLIC WORKS
PURCHASING POWER
RAPID GROWTH
RATE OF RETURN
RATE OF RETURN TO CAPITAL
REAL GDP
REDUCED INEQUALITY
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
RICH COUNTRIES
RULE OF LAW
RURAL POOR
SAFETY NETS
SAVINGS
SAVINGS RATIO
SCARCITY VALUE
SHADOW PRICES
SIGNIFICANT IMPACT
SKILLED LABOR
SOCIAL PROTECTION
SOCIAL SAFETY NETS
SOCIOECONOMIC DATA
STANDARD DEVIATION
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TFP
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
TRADITIONAL ECONOMY
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPORT
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNEQUAL ACCESS
URBAN AREAS
URBAN ECONOMY
VALUE ADDED
WAGES
WEALTH
WEALTH CREATION
WORLDWIDE GOVERNANCE INDICATORS
YOUNG PEOPLE
YOUNG WOMEN
YOUTH
spellingShingle ABSOLUTE SENSE
AGGREGATE LEVEL
AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
AGRICULTURE
AID DEPENDENCE
AVERAGE INCOMES
AVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY
BASE YEAR
BENCHMARK
BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
CAPITAL ACCUMULATION
CAPITAL EXPENDITURES
CAPITAL LEVELS
CAPITAL STOCK
CITIZENS
CIVIL SOCIETY
CIVIL WAR
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPETITIVENESS
COMPLEMENTARY FACTORS OF PRODUCTION
CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT
CORRUPTION
COUNTRY DATA
CREDIT RATIONING
DATA COLLECTION
DATA ISSUES
DEBT
DEPRECIATION OF ASSETS
DETERMINANTS OF GROWTH
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING WORLD
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
DEVELOPMENT GOALS
DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
DEVELOPMENT REPORT
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME
DIVERSIFICATION
DOMESTIC MARKETS
DOMESTIC SAVINGS
DUAL ECONOMY
ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC AFFAIRS
ECONOMIC DECLINE
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC HISTORY
ECONOMIC INSTABILITY
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
ECONOMIC PROGRESS
ECONOMIC SECTORS
ECONOMIC STABILITY
ECONOMIC SYSTEMS
ELECTRICITY SERVICES
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
EMPIRICAL LITERATURE
EMPIRICAL STUDIES
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION
EQUAL ACCESS
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATES
EXPECTED RETURNS
EXPORT DIVERSIFICATION
EXPORTS
EXTERNAL SHOCKS
EXTERNALITIES
EXTREME POVERTY
FACTOR ACCUMULATION
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FOREIGN AID
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN INVESTORS
GDP
GDP PER CAPITA
GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION
GROSS NATIONAL SAVINGS
GROWTH ACCOUNTING
GROWTH DIAGNOSTICS
GROWTH PATH
GROWTH PERFORMANCE
GROWTH PROCESS
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
GROWTH RESULTS
GROWTH WITHOUT DEVELOPMENT
HIGH GROWTH
HOUSEHOLD DATA
HUMAN CAPITAL
HUMAN RESOURCE
INCOME
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INCOME INEQUALITY
INCOME LEVEL
INCOME SHARE
INDUSTRIAL POLICY
INFORMATION EXTERNALITIES
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INVENTORY
LABOR FORCE
LABOR FORCE GROWTH
LABOR MARKET
LABOR SUPPLY
LAND USE
LITERACY RATES
LIVING STANDARDS
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
LONG RUN
LONG-TERM GROWTH
MACROECONOMIC MANAGEMENT
MACROECONOMIC POLICIES
MARKET FAILURE
MARKET FAILURES
MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES
MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRY
MIGRATION
NATIONAL ACCOUNTS
NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
NATIONAL INCOME
NATURAL CAPITAL
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEGATIVE EFFECT
NET SAVINGS
OUTPUT GROWTH
OUTPUT VOLATILITY
PER CAPITA GROWTH
PER CAPITA INCOME
POLICY ANALYSIS
POLICY ISSUES
POLICY MAKERS
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
POOR COUNTRIES
POPULATION SHARE
POVERTY REDUCTION
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY
PRESENT VALUE
PRIMARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY SCHOOL
PRIVATE SECTOR REPRESENTATIVES
PRO-POOR
PRO-POOR GROWTH
PRODUCTIVITY
PROFITABILITY
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC FINANCES
PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
PUBLIC SECTOR
PUBLIC SERVICES
PUBLIC WORKS
PURCHASING POWER
RAPID GROWTH
RATE OF RETURN
RATE OF RETURN TO CAPITAL
REAL GDP
REDUCED INEQUALITY
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
RICH COUNTRIES
RULE OF LAW
RURAL POOR
SAFETY NETS
SAVINGS
SAVINGS RATIO
SCARCITY VALUE
SHADOW PRICES
SIGNIFICANT IMPACT
SKILLED LABOR
SOCIAL PROTECTION
SOCIAL SAFETY NETS
SOCIOECONOMIC DATA
STANDARD DEVIATION
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TFP
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
TRADITIONAL ECONOMY
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPORT
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNEQUAL ACCESS
URBAN AREAS
URBAN ECONOMY
VALUE ADDED
WAGES
WEALTH
WEALTH CREATION
WORLDWIDE GOVERNANCE INDICATORS
YOUNG PEOPLE
YOUNG WOMEN
YOUTH
World Bank
Liberia : Inclusive Growth Diagnostics
geographic_facet Africa
Liberia
description Liberia aims to achieve middle-income status by 2030 through broad participation and inclusive growth. The Government's growth strategy aims to accelerate growth through the exploitation of natural resources, while maintaining sound macroeconomic policies, improving the business environment, and prudently allocating aid and commodity-based financing resources to expand infrastructure and formal sector employment. However, Liberia's experience with rapid growth in the 1960s and 1970s, that benefit a small percentage of the population, followed by economic collapse, widespread poverty and social unrest, and civil war, has made policymakers acutely aware that the quality of the growth process is at least as important as the rate of growth. Now that peace has been established and growth is once again on an upward trend, with the reactivation of the iron ore and agriculture sectors, and prospects for oil, promising opportunities for significant growth in the medium to long term, the Government wants to ensure that Liberia's growth over the next two decades will be sustainable and equitable. A key objective of the growth strategy is to avoid the traps posed by dependence on primary resources while creating the basis for economic diversification and employment generation, and providing opportunities and training so that individuals across the country can partake in the growth process. This diagnostic aims to support that strategy by identifying the factors in Liberia's economy that act as binding constraints to inclusive growth.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Liberia : Inclusive Growth Diagnostics
title_short Liberia : Inclusive Growth Diagnostics
title_full Liberia : Inclusive Growth Diagnostics
title_fullStr Liberia : Inclusive Growth Diagnostics
title_full_unstemmed Liberia : Inclusive Growth Diagnostics
title_sort liberia : inclusive growth diagnostics
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/02/16575286/liberia-inclusive-growth-diagnostics
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12609
_version_ 1764421810316640256
spelling okr-10986-126092021-04-23T14:03:05Z Liberia : Inclusive Growth Diagnostics World Bank ABSOLUTE SENSE AGGREGATE LEVEL AGRICULTURAL SECTOR AGRICULTURE AID DEPENDENCE AVERAGE INCOMES AVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY BASE YEAR BENCHMARK BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT CAPITAL ACCUMULATION CAPITAL EXPENDITURES CAPITAL LEVELS CAPITAL STOCK CITIZENS CIVIL SOCIETY CIVIL WAR COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE COMPETITIVENESS COMPLEMENTARY FACTORS OF PRODUCTION CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT CORRUPTION COUNTRY DATA CREDIT RATIONING DATA COLLECTION DATA ISSUES DEBT DEPRECIATION OF ASSETS DETERMINANTS OF GROWTH DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING WORLD DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT GOALS DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DEVELOPMENT REPORT DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME DIVERSIFICATION DOMESTIC MARKETS DOMESTIC SAVINGS DUAL ECONOMY ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC AFFAIRS ECONOMIC DECLINE ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC HISTORY ECONOMIC INSTABILITY ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ECONOMIC PROGRESS ECONOMIC SECTORS ECONOMIC STABILITY ECONOMIC SYSTEMS ELECTRICITY SERVICES EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE EMPIRICAL LITERATURE EMPIRICAL STUDIES ENTREPRENEURSHIP ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION EQUAL ACCESS EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATES EXPECTED RETURNS EXPORT DIVERSIFICATION EXPORTS EXTERNAL SHOCKS EXTERNALITIES EXTREME POVERTY FACTOR ACCUMULATION FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL SECTOR FOREIGN AID FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN INVESTORS GDP GDP PER CAPITA GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION GROSS NATIONAL SAVINGS GROWTH ACCOUNTING GROWTH DIAGNOSTICS GROWTH PATH GROWTH PERFORMANCE GROWTH PROCESS GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES GROWTH RESULTS GROWTH WITHOUT DEVELOPMENT HIGH GROWTH HOUSEHOLD DATA HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN RESOURCE INCOME INCOME DISTRIBUTION INCOME INEQUALITY INCOME LEVEL INCOME SHARE INDUSTRIAL POLICY INFORMATION EXTERNALITIES INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVENTORY LABOR FORCE LABOR FORCE GROWTH LABOR MARKET LABOR SUPPLY LAND USE LITERACY RATES LIVING STANDARDS LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LONG RUN LONG-TERM GROWTH MACROECONOMIC MANAGEMENT MACROECONOMIC POLICIES MARKET FAILURE MARKET FAILURES MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRY MIGRATION NATIONAL ACCOUNTS NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT NATIONAL INCOME NATURAL CAPITAL NATURAL RESOURCES NEGATIVE EFFECT NET SAVINGS OUTPUT GROWTH OUTPUT VOLATILITY PER CAPITA GROWTH PER CAPITA INCOME POLICY ANALYSIS POLICY ISSUES POLICY MAKERS POLITICAL INSTABILITY POOR COUNTRIES POPULATION SHARE POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY PRESENT VALUE PRIMARY EDUCATION PRIMARY SCHOOL PRIVATE SECTOR REPRESENTATIVES PRO-POOR PRO-POOR GROWTH PRODUCTIVITY PROFITABILITY PROPERTY RIGHTS PUBLIC FINANCES PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SERVICES PUBLIC WORKS PURCHASING POWER RAPID GROWTH RATE OF RETURN RATE OF RETURN TO CAPITAL REAL GDP REDUCED INEQUALITY REGULATORY FRAMEWORK RICH COUNTRIES RULE OF LAW RURAL POOR SAFETY NETS SAVINGS SAVINGS RATIO SCARCITY VALUE SHADOW PRICES SIGNIFICANT IMPACT SKILLED LABOR SOCIAL PROTECTION SOCIAL SAFETY NETS SOCIOECONOMIC DATA STANDARD DEVIATION SUSTAINABLE GROWTH TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TELECOMMUNICATIONS TFP TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRADITIONAL ECONOMY TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT UNEMPLOYMENT UNEQUAL ACCESS URBAN AREAS URBAN ECONOMY VALUE ADDED WAGES WEALTH WEALTH CREATION WORLDWIDE GOVERNANCE INDICATORS YOUNG PEOPLE YOUNG WOMEN YOUTH Liberia aims to achieve middle-income status by 2030 through broad participation and inclusive growth. The Government's growth strategy aims to accelerate growth through the exploitation of natural resources, while maintaining sound macroeconomic policies, improving the business environment, and prudently allocating aid and commodity-based financing resources to expand infrastructure and formal sector employment. However, Liberia's experience with rapid growth in the 1960s and 1970s, that benefit a small percentage of the population, followed by economic collapse, widespread poverty and social unrest, and civil war, has made policymakers acutely aware that the quality of the growth process is at least as important as the rate of growth. Now that peace has been established and growth is once again on an upward trend, with the reactivation of the iron ore and agriculture sectors, and prospects for oil, promising opportunities for significant growth in the medium to long term, the Government wants to ensure that Liberia's growth over the next two decades will be sustainable and equitable. A key objective of the growth strategy is to avoid the traps posed by dependence on primary resources while creating the basis for economic diversification and employment generation, and providing opportunities and training so that individuals across the country can partake in the growth process. This diagnostic aims to support that strategy by identifying the factors in Liberia's economy that act as binding constraints to inclusive growth. 2013-03-07T18:57:54Z 2013-03-07T18:57:54Z 2012-02-24 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/02/16575286/liberia-inclusive-growth-diagnostics http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12609 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Policy Note Economic & Sector Work Africa Liberia