Unlocking Sustainable Private Sector Growth in the Middle East and North Africa: Evidence from the Enterprise Survey
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Unlocking Sustainable Private Sector Growth in the Middle East and North Africa - European Investment Bank
UNLOCKING SUSTAINABLE PRIVATE SECTOR GROWTH IN THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
Evidence from the Enterprise Survey
About the European Investment Bank
The European Investment Bank Group is the EU bank and the world’s biggest multilateral lender. We finance sustainable investment in small and medium-sized enterprises, innovation, infrastructure, and climate and environment. We have financed Europe’s economic growth for six decades and are at the forefront of EU crisis response, leading the world in climate investment and backing development of the first COVID-19 vaccine. We are committed to triggering €1 trillion in investment in climate and environmental sustainability to combat climate change by the end of this decade. About 10% of all our investment is outside the European Union, where our EIB Global branch supports Europe’s neighbours and global development.
Contents
Foreword
Executive summary
Section 1 Introduction: Economic performance and the business environment
Section 2 Quality of governance and productivity
Section 3 Management practices and partial government ownership
Section 4 Trade and innovation in MENA
Section 5 Adoption of digital technology and productivity growth
Section 6 Businesses’ human capital and formal training of workers
Section 7 Access to finance and investment
Section 8 The green economy in the Middle East and North Africa
Section 9 Conclusions and policy implications
References
Bibliography of background papers
Glossary
Foreword
More than a decade after the Arab Spring, the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region finds itself facing momentous challenges. Waves of the coronavirus pandemic are disrupting economies, affecting every aspect of life. More recently, the Russian invasion of Ukraine sent shockwaves through the region in the form of higher hydrocarbon prices, risks to food security, and lower tourist arrivals. Beyond lies the looming threat of climate change. And the longstanding structural conditions of the past manifest themselves as continuing difficulties in the present.
Mounting debt and limited fiscal capacity have challenged the role of the state in the region. But challenging times provide opportunities for positive change. There is a chance for the MENA private sector to seize this moment. It remains the hope for many young people for their future and, while its role as the engine of growth has yet to be realised, the private sector has the potential to drive a greener region with a sustainable model of growth.
This report sheds light on the state of the MENA private sector through surveys of over 5 800 formal businesses across six MENA economies — Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Tunisia, and the West Bank and Gaza — conducted between late 2018 and 2020, largely before the pandemic.
The surveys are nationally representative — following the methodology of the World Bank Enterprise Surveys — and are of great value for a region that is significantly short on data. They are comparable to a previous round of surveys conducted in 2013, providing a measure of change across two points in time — a first for the Enterprise Surveys in MENA. They also contain new information on the green economy and the political connections of businesses.
Nine research papers have been produced from analysis of the data capturing different aspects of the private sector. This report is a cohesive analytical work based on the findings of these scholarly studies.
The findings give some cause for concern. They reveal that cronyism is prevalent in the private sector, while informality continues to limit firms’ growth ambitions. Many businesses are financially autarkic. Management practices across firms are generally poor, and the shadow of the state distorts incentives. Few businesses formally train their workers.
Furthermore, barriers to international trade remain, while adoption of digital technologies is limited. Green investments are low in the region, with most businesses having poor management practices on environment, energy and climate change. Corporate responsibility on environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues lags behind that in benchmark countries at a similar level of development.
But there is considerable heterogeneity within the region, providing hope that there are opportunities for both businesses and governments to learn from better performers within the region.
The enormous undertaking of conducting the Enterprise Surveys was made possible by extensive cooperation between three international institutions: the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the World Bank Group. The staff of these institutions remain committed to expanding knowledge about the Middle East and North Africa by shedding light on a private sector that has the potential to chart a promising path for the region. We hope you enjoy reading the report.
Executive summary
Economic growth in the Middle East and North Africa has been weak since the global financial crisis of 2007-09 and the Arab Spring of the early 2010s. On average, gross domestic product (GDP) per capita has grown by only 0.3% a year in six representative economies of the region: Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Tunisia, and the West Bank and Gaza. That compares unfavourably with rates of 1.7% on average in middle-income countries and 2.4% in the developing economies of Europe and Central Asia (ECA).
Achieving higher and sustainable growth is particularly important in view of other economic challenges facing the region: Public debt in MENA countries has increased considerably over the last decade, accompanied by declining investment. More recently, the coronavirus pandemic has battered the region, further straining public finances. In addition, the Russian invasion of Ukraine affects the economies covered in this report through higher hydrocarbon prices, risks to food security and declining tourism.
This report seeks to understand what lies beneath that relatively slow growth, with a particular focus on the reasons for stagnating productivity and inadequate accumulation of human capital and physical capital in the region’s private sector. To this end, the report summarises the main findings from nine background papers based on Enterprise Survey data. It also draws conclusions for policy, not only for promoting stronger firm performance, but also for addressing the challenge of climate change by pursuing sustainable growth.
The background studies draw on data from Enterprise Surveys of over 5 800 formal businesses across the abovementioned six MENA economies conducted between late 2018 and 2020, largely before the coronavirus pandemic. Data from the same survey conducted in 28 ECA countries provide points of comparison with economies at similar stages of development, while data from a previous survey conducted in MENA in 2013 provide a measure of change over time. Although the Enterprise Survey data largely predate the pandemic, they remain extremely relevant as they offer a precise snapshot of the more structural features and weaknesses of the business environment. Resilience to the new shocks — and capacity to react — are likely to be affected by those structural features.
The Enterprise Surveys entail face-to-face interviews with the owners or main managers of