Promoting a New Economy for the Middle East and North Africa

Countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) possess all the ingredients they need to leapfrog into the digital future. They have large, well-educated youth populations that have already adopted new digital and mobile technologies on a wide...

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Main Authors: Arezki, Rabah, Belhaj, Ferid, Shah, Parmesh
Format: Essays
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/781781561575850158/Promoting-a-New-Economy-for-the-Middle-East-and-North-Africa
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31984
id okr-10986-31984
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
topic INSTITUTION BUILDING
JOB CREATION
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
VENTURE CAPITAL
REGULATION
E-COMMERCE
TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION
DIGITAL ECONOMY
INFRASTRUCTURE
INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY
E-GOVERNMENT
FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT
HUMAN CAPITAL
YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
DEMOGRAPHICS
SCIENCE EDUCATION
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
spellingShingle INSTITUTION BUILDING
JOB CREATION
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
VENTURE CAPITAL
REGULATION
E-COMMERCE
TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION
DIGITAL ECONOMY
INFRASTRUCTURE
INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY
E-GOVERNMENT
FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT
HUMAN CAPITAL
YOUTH EMPLOYMENT
DEMOGRAPHICS
SCIENCE EDUCATION
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
Arezki, Rabah
Belhaj, Ferid
Shah, Parmesh
Promoting a New Economy for the Middle East and North Africa
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
Middle East
North Africa
description Countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) possess all the ingredients they need to leapfrog into the digital future. They have large, well-educated youth populations that have already adopted new digital and mobile technologies on a wide scale. They have a highly educated female population. That combination has immense potential to drive future growth and job creation. The question is whether the region can adapt to a new economic reality. Public spending, the region's historical engine of development, has reached its limit. Because the public sector can no longer absorb the swelling ranks of university graduates, the MENA region has one of the world's highest rates of youth unemployment. For a variety of reasons, many of them cultural, highly educated women stay home. The female labor participation rate is among the lowest in the world. The digital economy holds the promise of a new way forward, but it is still in its infancy, and young people face obstacles in putting technology to productive use. Although the internet and hand-held devices are ubiquitous throughout the region, they are currently used for accessing social media, rather than for launching new enterprises. But there are green shoots emerging. For example, the ride-hailing app Careem has grown from a start-up to a billion-dollar company, creating thousands of jobs in 80 cities in the MENA region and in Pakistan and Turkey. And new digital platforms are already connecting job seekers and employers, providing vocational training, and hosting start-up incubators. The challenge now is to create the conditions for these green shoots to grow and multiply. The first, essential step is for MENA countries to become "learning societies," a phrase coined by the Nobel laureate economist Joseph E. Stiglitz to describe countries in which shared knowledge leads to increased innovation. This, in turn, fosters development; and in the case of MENA, it could lead to the creation of a vibrant digital service economy. To get there, education systems must change. For the region's young people, the curriculum is more often a source of frustration than advancement. The concept of a "skills premium" — the difference in wages between skilled and unskilled workers—dictates that higher educational attainment should lead to higher compensation and more secure employment. Yet in the MENA region, the opposite has happened: university graduates are far more likely to be unemployed than are workers with only a basic education. Two factors work against the region's young people. First, schools are still geared toward channeling graduates into large public sectors, which means they place less emphasis on fields such as mathematics and science. Second, bloated public sectors are crowding out the private sector, which would otherwise be a larger provider of high-skill, high-wage jobs.
author2 Arezki, Rabah
author_facet Arezki, Rabah
Arezki, Rabah
Belhaj, Ferid
Shah, Parmesh
format Essays
author Arezki, Rabah
Belhaj, Ferid
Shah, Parmesh
author_sort Arezki, Rabah
title Promoting a New Economy for the Middle East and North Africa
title_short Promoting a New Economy for the Middle East and North Africa
title_full Promoting a New Economy for the Middle East and North Africa
title_fullStr Promoting a New Economy for the Middle East and North Africa
title_full_unstemmed Promoting a New Economy for the Middle East and North Africa
title_sort promoting a new economy for the middle east and north africa
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/781781561575850158/Promoting-a-New-Economy-for-the-Middle-East-and-North-Africa
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31984
_version_ 1764475519372361728
spelling okr-10986-319842021-05-25T09:25:26Z Promoting a New Economy for the Middle East and North Africa Arezki, Rabah Belhaj, Ferid Shah, Parmesh Arezki, Rabah Belhaj, Ferid Shah, Parmesh Aghabi, Issa Al-Razouki, Mussaad Andriessen, Mechteld Blagsvedt, Sean Elahian, Kamran Goh, Lesley Jelil, Mohammed Abdel Jones, Van McGraw, Sarah Maiorano, Federica Nigro, Salvatore Pachon, Claudia Maria Peitz, Martin Reille, Xavier Senbet, Lemma Sharma, R.S. Sheikha, Mudassir de Soyres, Francois Strey, Simone Voogt, Maurits INSTITUTION BUILDING JOB CREATION ENTREPRENEURSHIP VENTURE CAPITAL REGULATION E-COMMERCE TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION DIGITAL ECONOMY INFRASTRUCTURE INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY E-GOVERNMENT FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT HUMAN CAPITAL YOUTH EMPLOYMENT DEMOGRAPHICS SCIENCE EDUCATION AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY Countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) possess all the ingredients they need to leapfrog into the digital future. They have large, well-educated youth populations that have already adopted new digital and mobile technologies on a wide scale. They have a highly educated female population. That combination has immense potential to drive future growth and job creation. The question is whether the region can adapt to a new economic reality. Public spending, the region's historical engine of development, has reached its limit. Because the public sector can no longer absorb the swelling ranks of university graduates, the MENA region has one of the world's highest rates of youth unemployment. For a variety of reasons, many of them cultural, highly educated women stay home. The female labor participation rate is among the lowest in the world. The digital economy holds the promise of a new way forward, but it is still in its infancy, and young people face obstacles in putting technology to productive use. Although the internet and hand-held devices are ubiquitous throughout the region, they are currently used for accessing social media, rather than for launching new enterprises. But there are green shoots emerging. For example, the ride-hailing app Careem has grown from a start-up to a billion-dollar company, creating thousands of jobs in 80 cities in the MENA region and in Pakistan and Turkey. And new digital platforms are already connecting job seekers and employers, providing vocational training, and hosting start-up incubators. The challenge now is to create the conditions for these green shoots to grow and multiply. The first, essential step is for MENA countries to become "learning societies," a phrase coined by the Nobel laureate economist Joseph E. Stiglitz to describe countries in which shared knowledge leads to increased innovation. This, in turn, fosters development; and in the case of MENA, it could lead to the creation of a vibrant digital service economy. To get there, education systems must change. For the region's young people, the curriculum is more often a source of frustration than advancement. The concept of a "skills premium" — the difference in wages between skilled and unskilled workers—dictates that higher educational attainment should lead to higher compensation and more secure employment. Yet in the MENA region, the opposite has happened: university graduates are far more likely to be unemployed than are workers with only a basic education. Two factors work against the region's young people. First, schools are still geared toward channeling graduates into large public sectors, which means they place less emphasis on fields such as mathematics and science. Second, bloated public sectors are crowding out the private sector, which would otherwise be a larger provider of high-skill, high-wage jobs. 2019-06-26T21:39:30Z 2019-06-26T21:39:30Z 2019-06-26 Essays http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/781781561575850158/Promoting-a-New-Economy-for-the-Middle-East-and-North-Africa http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31984 English 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 Middle East and North Africa Middle East North Africa