Browse
You are looking at 1 - 1 of 1 items for :
- Business and Management x
- Syrian Arab Republic x
- Morocco x
- Other Special Topics x
- Society and Social Sciences x
- International Agreements and Observance; International Organizations x
- International organization x
- Finance x
- Financial Economics x
- Finance & Development x
- Ownership & organization of enterprises x
- Asset and liability management x
- Liquidity; Economics x
- Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity: General x
- Corporate Finance and Governance: General x
- Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics x
Two years ago, citizens in the Arab world—fired by their ideals and visions of a better life—ignited a social movement that inspired people around the globe. In Egypt, Jordan, Libya, Morocco, Tunisia, and Yemen—the so-called Arab countries in transition—people embraced change, ushering in a new era. This issue of F&D looks at the difficulties of this transition, focusing on long-standing forces that shape the region’s economy and offering options for moving ahead to achieve strong, inclusive growth. • Masood Ahmed, Director of the IMF’s Middle East and Central Asia Department, maps out an agenda for modernizing and diversifying the region’s economies in “Toward Prosperity for All.” • In “Freedom and Bread Go Together,” Marwan Muasher addresses the intersection of economic progress and political change. • Vali Nasr, in a Point of View column, underscores the vital role small and medium-sized enterprises play in a successful democratic transition. Elsewhere in this issue, we look at how surging oil and gas production in the United States could shake up global energy markets; the effect of uncertainty on economic growth; and Mexico’s competitiveness rebound. F&D's People in Economics series profiles Christina Romer, former chair of the U.S. Council of Economic Advisers and an architect of the U.S. stimulus package; and the latest installment in our Back to Basics series explains how structural policies help to both stabilize and strengthen economies.