From: glevy@pratt.edu
Date: Fri Jun 13 2008 - 12:35:17 EDT
---------------------------- Original Message ---------------------------- Subject: SURVEY OF ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENTS IN THE ESCWA REGION From: "Ali Kadri" <kadri@un.org> Date: Fri, June 13, 2008 6:23 am -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Kindly find attached the three previous issues of the summary of the SURVEY OF ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENTS IN THE ESCWA REGION (This is the official document presented to the Economic and Social Council about Western Asia). The Survey comprises two parts, namely: a first part that covers recent socio-economic developments; and a second part that explores in depth a topical social and developmental issue. Within the context of the latter, the thematic part has focused since 2005 on economic and social issues in line with development as a human right, with the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) as guiding principles. Why so? Because in this region we notice that: · Average real per capita growth was highly volatile and more dependent on oil than ever; it was over the 1980-2005 at negative one to two percentage points. · Regional unemployment now stands at a little over 14 percent (official rate), twice the world rate. · Income inequality measured by the GINI coefficient has steadily risen also to reach the highest levels globally. · All round human development has been weak. In the case of Egypt, after 25 years of nearly six percent real GDP growth, a 15 percent rise in the price of bread led to mass riots and exposed the fragility of development. Indeed, income inequality measured but the Gini coefficient was rising at the same time. A recent article notes that Egypt is back to the 'two-percent economy' under King Farouk, i.e. when two percent of the population owned most of the wealth. The focus on rights is because rent economies do not produce commensurate jobs for the population, and welfare can be strengthened by redistribution measures. The region exported nearly a trillion dollars outside since 2002 and what remained, i.e. most investment went into real estate and poorly regulated equity markets. There is, unlike elsewhere, a primacy of politics here and pro-poor economic strategies have to be situated on the basis of the right to development. Insofar as macro policies are concerned, the idea of right to development is based on the 1986 declaration and couched in it are pro-poor policies. Meaning, first, mass poverty is the most important problem facing the ESCWA countries, and its elimination should be the main priority of their governments. it suggests that poverty cannot be reduced to the inability to reach an arbitrary level of income. Rather, insufficient income is one of the implications of the structural inequalities constituting the economic system in the countries in the region. It follows that the solution to deeply ingrained problems of poverty and inequality is primarily political, rather than economic. The second principle is that pro poor growth must benefit the poor more than the rich; growth is rights-based when it reduces relative as well as absolute poverty. In this framework, economic policies are not selected in order to maximize growth; reciprocally, equity is not an instrument for the achievement of rapid growth. Although high growth can facilitate the achievement of these outcomes, the type of growth is at least as important as the rate of economic growth. In this approach, GDP growth, inflation control, high investment, low public debt and other conventional parameters of economic ‘success’ should not be the most important objectives of government policy. Instead, they should be seen as instruments for the elimination of mass poverty and the achievement of secure, sustainable, equitable and empowering human development. Third, improvements in distribution and social welfare should be pursued directly. These improvements should not be merely marginal or conditional on trickle-down processes, and they must be unambiguous across a broad spectrum of measures of welfare and distribution. Changes in the initial distribution of income and wealth in the ESCWA region (for example, through land reform, universal basic education and training and the introduction of pensions and other entitlements funded by progressive taxation) can promote several pro poor-based objectives simultaneously in the countries in the region. So, if after reading these documents, you wish to be included on our mailing list, please send me your request to Ms. Arpy Atamian: atamian@un.org Regards. Ali Kadri UN ESCWA - Economic Analysis Division P.O. Box 11-8575 - Riad el-Solh Square Beirut, Lebanon Tel: (+961) 1-981-301 #1457 Fax: (+961) 1-981-510 _______________________________________________ ope mailing list ope@lists.csuchico.edu https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/ope
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