This article examines the results of economic reform programs since the mid-1980s in Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Egypt. Although these states have liberalized their economies in the face o9f international and domestic market forces, ruling elites have been adept at maintaining control over the distribution of resources. Selective reforms have prevented the emergence of competitive markets and powerful, autonomous private sectors and have yet to induce a transition to political liberalism and accountable government in North Africa
This article fills an important gap in the literature by exploring the trends in social welfare in f...
Since its independence in 1962, Algeria, as an oil producing country, undertook the construction of ...
The concept of upgrading is new in the economic literature, very few theorists are focused on explai...
This article examines the results of economic reform programs since the mid-1980s in Morocco, Algeri...
Since the early 1980s, the Moroccan authorities have decided to switch from a model of a relatively ...
The literature on regime change in the MENA region had claimed the occurrence of political liberaliz...
To what degree are trade liberalization, productivity, and economic growth correlated? Can economic ...
There is a tendency in neo-liberal economics to consider the state and the private sector as one ano...
The Arab Spring disrupted an already turbulent region. A denial of economic free-dom launched the Ar...
Largely following prescriptions by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, ‘orthodox’ ec...
This article challenges claims that liberalising state-regulated markets in developing countries may...
International audienceThe declared objective of the liberalization reforms during the 1980s and the ...
This thesis focuses on the evolution of the Moroccan economy. It also looks at how the implementatio...
This article challenges claims that liberalising state regulated markets in developing countries may...
Over recent decades, three North African economies – Tunisia, Morocco and Egypt – have been regional...
This article fills an important gap in the literature by exploring the trends in social welfare in f...
Since its independence in 1962, Algeria, as an oil producing country, undertook the construction of ...
The concept of upgrading is new in the economic literature, very few theorists are focused on explai...
This article examines the results of economic reform programs since the mid-1980s in Morocco, Algeri...
Since the early 1980s, the Moroccan authorities have decided to switch from a model of a relatively ...
The literature on regime change in the MENA region had claimed the occurrence of political liberaliz...
To what degree are trade liberalization, productivity, and economic growth correlated? Can economic ...
There is a tendency in neo-liberal economics to consider the state and the private sector as one ano...
The Arab Spring disrupted an already turbulent region. A denial of economic free-dom launched the Ar...
Largely following prescriptions by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, ‘orthodox’ ec...
This article challenges claims that liberalising state-regulated markets in developing countries may...
International audienceThe declared objective of the liberalization reforms during the 1980s and the ...
This thesis focuses on the evolution of the Moroccan economy. It also looks at how the implementatio...
This article challenges claims that liberalising state regulated markets in developing countries may...
Over recent decades, three North African economies – Tunisia, Morocco and Egypt – have been regional...
This article fills an important gap in the literature by exploring the trends in social welfare in f...
Since its independence in 1962, Algeria, as an oil producing country, undertook the construction of ...
The concept of upgrading is new in the economic literature, very few theorists are focused on explai...