Posted at :
Informed Comment
 
_Artificial Billionaires: Regimes’ Crony Capitalism Stifling Middle  East_ 
(http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/juancole/ymbn/~3/O-L4RLMrKuc/artificial-billi
onaires-capitalism.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email)   
Posted:  27 Oct 2014 09:26 PM PDT 
 
World Bank 
Across the Middle East and North Africa, countries are being forced to face 
 up to a harsh reality—that, left as they are now, their economies won’t 
create  anything like enough jobs for the hundreds of thousands of people 
entering their  job markets each year. Popular discontent will continue 
alongside widespread  economic inactivity. What can they do to change this? 
Official data, made available only since the Arab Spring in 2011, has given 
 World Bank researchers the opportunity to compare the region’s job 
performance  and the policies that shape them, and examine what’s going wrong. 
Their  conclusions are contained in a new report, _Jobs  or Privileges: 
Unleashing the Employment Potential of the Middle East and North  Africa_ 
(http://www.worldbank.org/en/region/mena/publication/jobs-or-privileges-unleashing-the-
employment-potential-of-the-middle-east-and-north-africa) . 
The “privileges” referred to in the report are the many old policies that  
continue to protect the business interests of entrenched elites. The report 
 shows the extent to which these policies—designed to prevent or deter  
competitors while allowing elites to make easy money or “to earn rents”—
distort  the natural workings of economies in which businesses either grow and 
become  more productive, or exit the market. In this environment, political 
connections  are more important for success than innovative spirit. 
The newly available census data unearthed for the report reveals how firms  
linked to former regimes in Tunisia and Egypt were given undue privileges, 
or  business advantages: in Egypt, for example, 71 percent of politically 
connected  but only 4 percent of unconnected firms sell products protected by 
at least  three import barriers; while in Tunisia, 64 percent of connected 
firms but only  36 percent of non-connected firms operate in sectors in which 
Foreign Direct  Investment is restricted. 
Privileged insiders also have outsized influence over such sectors: one of  
the best-known cases is that of the American fast food giant, McDonalds, 
which  never managed to enter the Tunisian market because it rejected an 
exclusive  offer from a franchisee with ties to the regime of the country’s 
former leader,  Ben Ali. 
Privileges like this put local entrepreneurs without political connections 
at  a disadvantage, stunting domestic investment.  Uncertainty over which  
economic policies a government might adopt—and whether they will be 
implemented  evenly—deters foreign investors.  
The millions of workers, consumers, and entrepreneurs who bear the cost of  
this are often unaware the impact these policies have on the opportunities 
to  which they aspire. In Egypt, for example, aggregate employment growth 
declines  by about 1.4 percentage points a year when connected firms enter new 
business  sectors. Without grasping this, the internal debate critical for 
economic reform  is curtailed. 
In economies in MENA, like economies everywhere else, it is the start-ups 
and  the most productive firms that are the engines of job creation. The 
report  provides plenty of evidence to support this: in Lebanon, about 177 per 
cent of  net job creation from 2005 to 2010 was generated by micro start-ups; 
in Tunisia,  small startups created 580,000 jobs from 1996 to 2010—92 
percent of all net job  creation.  
Although it has fewer start-ups overall, Jordan provides a striking example 
 of what entrepreneurs can achieve against the odds. Unable to tap start-up 
 capital, a Jordanian couple who returned home in 2002 after working for 
the  Swedish communications firm, Ericsson, used their own contacts and money 
to  set-up a software company. By 2008, it employed 100 engineers locally 
and  exported 80 percent of its products. 
The region needs a larger pool of young firms and productive firms like 
this  to unleash private sector job creation. However, existing rules tend to 
protect  established insiders rather than encourage new ventures, creating 
few incentives  to turn good ideas into new ventures. Only six limited 
liability companies are  created per 10,000 working-age persons on average each 
year in the region,  compared to 20 across 91 developing nations, and as many 
as 40 and 80 in Chile  and Bulgaria. 
This means that despite the fact that more than 65 percent of the 
populations  of most MENA countries are of working age, the energy of a growing 
workforce has  largely gone to waste. Instead of filling skilled, 
high-productivity jobs (such  as those in the software industry), relatively 
well-educated 
jobseekers have  disappeared into low-productivity services in the retail 
trade, hotels and  restaurants— often jobs with fewer benefits or 
opportunities for advancement.  Women, who face cultural hurdles, have the 
lowest 
representation in the labor  force anywhere in the world. 
Only by removing the type of privileges described in this report can the  
region move toward the level of job creation it needs. The report shows that  
promoting open markets and competition, and leveling the playing field, 
will  provide an environment conducive to entrepreneurship and the emergence of 
 dynamic firms. Reforms initiated transparently would make sure citizens 
are  aware of what their governments are doing and can provide input into  
policymaking. 

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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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