Reprinted with permission from the United
States Committee for A Free Lebanon.
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Article: |
Why the Middle East doesn't work |
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Author: |
Nigel Holloway and Kerry Dolan |
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Date: |
March 2002 |
(As appeared in Forbes Magazine)
The region stands athwart three continents, Europe,
Asia and Africa. Its ideal location gave rise to trade but also made it
difficult and expensive to defend against interlopers. The Ottomans succumbed to
European domination in the 19th century, but the region emerged after World War
II with socialist policies that deeply scarred its economies. Some, such as
Syria, Iran and Iraq, are still suffering from heavy state ownership and highly
distorted prices. Iran spends more than 12% of GDP subsidizing the cost of
energy. Throughout the Middle East, the public sector's share of the economy is
among the highest in the world, at 32% of GDP, compared with 20% of GDP for
other low- and middle-income countries.
Except for Israel, the Middle East has never emphasized the
export of manufactures, a strategy that worked so well in East Asia. Indeed,
Egypt has seen manufactured exports fall, from 8% of GDP six years ago to less
than half that today. This has left the region dependent on erratically priced
oil, which makes up 73% of the region's exports. "The Middle East has not really
embraced globalization," says Omar Salah, the CEO of Century Investment,
Jordan's largest private-sector employer. "The problem is that we don't really
trade with each other." Indeed, even Africa does more of such
commerce.
Israel, of course, has had little
choice but to find markets outside the Middle East. This has proved a blessing
in disguise, because it has cushioned the economy against the turmoil within the
region. Just as important, Israel's capital markets mesh closely with those of
the rest of the world, Nasdaq in particular.
Capital markets elsewhere in the region are virtually
nonexistent. "The Middle East has neither the breadth nor depth of financial
markets to support development," says Yago. Beginning in the 1970s, oil
windfalls were put into international banks, where they fostered activity nearly
every place else. The combined capitalization of the region's equity markets,
including Israel's, is only 0.65% of the world's. The shares that are traded are
highly illiquid, and almost no venture capital is available.
"The young entrepreneur worries about getting finance, and the
financier worries about the enforceability of contracts," says Mustapha Nabli,
the chief economist for the Middle East at the World Bank.
The banking system isn't much better. There's an almost total
absence of competition among the banks, thus little incentive to lend to small
businesses. "To get a loan at all from a bank, you almost always have to pay a
bribe," says Maher Ammar, a mechanical engineer in Egypt who lost two jobs in as
many years as a result of cutbacks. In Syria the government recently announced
that it would allow private banks to operate; all the banks are owned by the
state. Syria's president, Bashar Assad, has proven to be a big disappointment as
an economic reformer since succeeding his father in 2000.
Not so his counterpart, King Abdullah of Jordan, who assumed
the throne 18 months earlier. He has privatized most of the country's
state-owned industries, implemented a free-trade pact with the U.S. and revamped
the school system. Economic growth was a resilient 4% in 2000 and was running at
the same rate in the first nine months of 2001. "Some other countries do not
have the enlightened, bold leadership to take them in this direction," says
Henry Azzam, the CEO of Jordinvest, a regional bank based in Jordan. Dubai is
another bright spot.
In Egypt reforms that
began in the late 1990s have been put on hold. "It's politics. If you privatize,
you have to lay off people," Azzam says.
And of course conflict is a continuing scourge. Israel has
managed, fitfully, to prosper in spite of war. For other economies, true peace
may be a sine qua non.
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© Copyright 1997-2001 United States Committee For A Free Lebanon. All rights reserved.
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