Cluster Country Program Evaluation on Small States : Mauritius Country Case Study, Enhancing Competitiveness and Private Sector Development

After nearly two decades of strong economic growth, in 2005 the economy was in difficulties. The loss of trade preferences in textiles in 2005, the anticipation of prospective reform to the European Union’s sugar protocol for 2006-10, and higher in...

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Main Author: Charlier, Florence
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/09/26820705/cluster-country-program-evaluation-small-states-mauritius-country-case-study-fy0715-enhancing-competitiveness-private-sector-development
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25195
id okr-10986-25195
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-251952021-05-25T08:52:04Z Cluster Country Program Evaluation on Small States : Mauritius Country Case Study, Enhancing Competitiveness and Private Sector Development Charlier, Florence country assistance strategy export competitiveness private sector development development policy operations trade policy financial sector reform infrastructure investment SME development tourism After nearly two decades of strong economic growth, in 2005 the economy was in difficulties. The loss of trade preferences in textiles in 2005, the anticipation of prospective reform to the European Union’s sugar protocol for 2006-10, and higher international oil prices had contributed to a slow-down in growth, rising unemployment and widening fiscal and current account deficits. A new government was elected in 2005 which implemented a series of bold economic reforms (such as the elimination of the export processing zone (EPZ) regime, a progressive liberalization of the foreign trade and investment regime and simplification of labor laws) to redress the macro-economic imbalances and enhance competitiveness to facilitate efficient restructuring of the economy. This was achieved in large measure. Good policies also allowed the government to deal effectively with the global financial crisis of 2008. Following elections in 2010, a new (and fragile) coalition government was elected which emphasized fiscal stimulus and the pace of reforms slowed. Following a period of political instability, a new government was elected in 2014 with an overwhelming majority. However, as fiscal pressures mount, a sense of policy drift continues, threatening the gains achieved in recent years. The World Bank Group supported the government’s reform efforts throughout the evaluation period. Support was provided largely in the form of development policy loans (DPLs), complemented by analytic work and technical assistance (TA) for capacity building in various parts of the government. The World Bank’s strategy was aligned with the government’s priorities during 2005-10, but it failed to adapt when the appetite for reforms waned after a new coalition government took office following elections in 2010. The World Bank’s strategy was flexible and the program underwent significant changes to respond to changing government priorities and unfavorable external conditions. The World Bank’s program addressed the twin challenges of building resilience (macro-economic and social) and enhancing competitiveness that are common to other small states. Perhaps the World Bank could have been more selective in its areas of interventions. 2016-10-19T17:12:47Z 2016-10-19T17:12:47Z 2016 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/09/26820705/cluster-country-program-evaluation-small-states-mauritius-country-case-study-fy0715-enhancing-competitiveness-private-sector-development http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25195 English en_US Independent Evaluation Group (IEG) working paper series; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Working Paper Africa Mauritius
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 country assistance strategy
export competitiveness
private sector development
development policy operations
trade policy
financial sector reform
infrastructure investment
SME development
tourism
spellingShingle country assistance strategy
export competitiveness
private sector development
development policy operations
trade policy
financial sector reform
infrastructure investment
SME development
tourism
Charlier, Florence
Cluster Country Program Evaluation on Small States : Mauritius Country Case Study, Enhancing Competitiveness and Private Sector Development
geographic_facet Africa
Mauritius
relation Independent Evaluation Group (IEG) working paper series;
description After nearly two decades of strong economic growth, in 2005 the economy was in difficulties. The loss of trade preferences in textiles in 2005, the anticipation of prospective reform to the European Union’s sugar protocol for 2006-10, and higher international oil prices had contributed to a slow-down in growth, rising unemployment and widening fiscal and current account deficits. A new government was elected in 2005 which implemented a series of bold economic reforms (such as the elimination of the export processing zone (EPZ) regime, a progressive liberalization of the foreign trade and investment regime and simplification of labor laws) to redress the macro-economic imbalances and enhance competitiveness to facilitate efficient restructuring of the economy. This was achieved in large measure. Good policies also allowed the government to deal effectively with the global financial crisis of 2008. Following elections in 2010, a new (and fragile) coalition government was elected which emphasized fiscal stimulus and the pace of reforms slowed. Following a period of political instability, a new government was elected in 2014 with an overwhelming majority. However, as fiscal pressures mount, a sense of policy drift continues, threatening the gains achieved in recent years. The World Bank Group supported the government’s reform efforts throughout the evaluation period. Support was provided largely in the form of development policy loans (DPLs), complemented by analytic work and technical assistance (TA) for capacity building in various parts of the government. The World Bank’s strategy was aligned with the government’s priorities during 2005-10, but it failed to adapt when the appetite for reforms waned after a new coalition government took office following elections in 2010. The World Bank’s strategy was flexible and the program underwent significant changes to respond to changing government priorities and unfavorable external conditions. The World Bank’s program addressed the twin challenges of building resilience (macro-economic and social) and enhancing competitiveness that are common to other small states. Perhaps the World Bank could have been more selective in its areas of interventions.
format Working Paper
author Charlier, Florence
author_facet Charlier, Florence
author_sort Charlier, Florence
title Cluster Country Program Evaluation on Small States : Mauritius Country Case Study, Enhancing Competitiveness and Private Sector Development
title_short Cluster Country Program Evaluation on Small States : Mauritius Country Case Study, Enhancing Competitiveness and Private Sector Development
title_full Cluster Country Program Evaluation on Small States : Mauritius Country Case Study, Enhancing Competitiveness and Private Sector Development
title_fullStr Cluster Country Program Evaluation on Small States : Mauritius Country Case Study, Enhancing Competitiveness and Private Sector Development
title_full_unstemmed Cluster Country Program Evaluation on Small States : Mauritius Country Case Study, Enhancing Competitiveness and Private Sector Development
title_sort cluster country program evaluation on small states : mauritius country case study, enhancing competitiveness and private sector development
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2016
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/09/26820705/cluster-country-program-evaluation-small-states-mauritius-country-case-study-fy0715-enhancing-competitiveness-private-sector-development
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25195
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