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Title:
Convergence : five critical steps toward integrating lagging and leading areas in the Middle East and North Africa.
Publisher:
World Bank Group,
Copyright Date:
2020
Description:
xxvi, 209 pages : color illustrations, maps ; 27 cm
Subject:
Economic development--Government policy--Middle East.
Economic development--Government policy--Africa, North.
Cities and towns--Middle East--Growth.
Cities and towns--Africa, North--Growth.
Cities and towns--Growth
Economic development--Government policy
Middle East
North Africa
Other Authors:
Lall, Somik V., editor.
Mahgoub, Ayah, editor.
Notes:
"This report was prepared by a team led by Somik V. Lall, co-led by Ayah Mahgoub, and comprising Paolo Avner, Julie Biau, Alex Chunet, Olivia D'Aoust, Uwe Deichmann, Katrin Heger, Mathilde Lebrand, Sally Murray, Emiko Naomasa, Diana Tello, and Yuan Xiao."--Acknowledgments Includes bibliographical references.
Summary:
Policy makers across the Middle East and North Africa have for many years articulated plans to integrate their people spatially and economically. Wishing to bring communities together and narrow economic gaps, governments have made large capital investments in transport corridors and new cities. Hoping to provide jobs in places with little economic activity, governments have designated new industrial zones supported by spatially targeted business incentives. Yet the results of these place-based initiatives in MENA are limited. The disparities between capital cities and lagging areas, and between richer and poorer quarters of cities, remain stark. Across much of the region, a fortunate few are connected to opportunity, while many more people are marginal to the formal economy-- or live outside it, seemingly forgotten. Why have place-based spatial initiatives in MENA countries largely underdelivered, not yielding more sustainable jobs and growth? Although the challenges are many and vary across the region, this book explains that many of these place-based policies get one thing wrong: they attempt to treat inequity's spatial and physical symptoms, not its causes. This book presents the five roots causes of spatial inequity in institutional inefficiencies across MENA-- urban regulatory frictions, credentialist education systems, centralized control over local public services, barriers to the spatial mobility of goods and people, and barriers to market entry and lopsided business environments-- within cities, within countries, and across national borders. -- Back cover.
ISBN:
1464814503
9781464814501
OCLC:
(OCoLC)1193027504
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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