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Overconfident : How Economic and Health Fault Lines Left the Middle East and North Africa Ill-Prepared to Face COVID-19

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collection.link.130
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/5995
collection.link.131
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/5996
collection.link.212
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/11865
collection.name.130
French PDFs Available
collection.name.131
Arabic PDFs Available
collection.name.212
MENA Economic Monitor
dc.contributor.author
Gatti, Roberta
dc.contributor.author
Lederman, Daniel
dc.contributor.author
Fan, Rachel Yuting
dc.contributor.author
Hatefi, Arian
dc.contributor.author
Nguyen, Ha
dc.contributor.author
Sautmann, Anja
dc.contributor.author
Sax, Joseph Martin
dc.contributor.author
Wood, Christina A.
dc.date.accessioned
2021-09-30T19:12:49Z
dc.date.available
2021-09-30T19:12:49Z
dc.date.issued
2021-10-07
dc.date.lastModified
2021-10-21T14:58:59Z
dc.description.abstract
This report examines the region’s economic prospects in 2021, forecasting that the recovery will be both tenuous and uneven as per capita GDP level stays below pre-pandemic levels. COVID-19 was a stress-test for the region’s public health systems, which were already overwhelmed even before the pandemic. Indeed, a decade of lackluster economic reforms left a legacy of large public sectors and high public debt that effectively crowded out investments in social services such as public health. This edition points out that the region’s health systems were not only ill-prepared for the pandemic, but suffered from over-confidence, as authorities painted an overly optimistic picture in self-assessments of health system preparedness. Going forward, governments must improve data transparency for public health and undertake reforms to remedy historical underinvestment in public health systems.
en
dc.identifier
https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/890331633670289901/overconfident-how-economic-and-health-fault-lines-left-the-middle-east-and-north-africa-ill-prepared-to-face-covid-19
dc.identifier.isbn
978-1-4648-1798-4
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36318
dc.publisher
Washington, DC: World Bank
dc.relation.ispartofseries
MENA Economic Update;October 2021
dc.rights
CC BY 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holder
World Bank
dc.rights.uri
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo
dc.subject
ECONOMIC GROWTH
dc.subject
CURRENT ACCOUNT
dc.subject
OIL PRICE
dc.subject
EXTERNAL BALANCE
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FISCAL TRENDS
dc.subject
OIL EXPORTER
dc.subject
OIL IMPORTER
dc.subject
PRODUCTIVITY
dc.subject
CORONAVIRUS
dc.subject
COVID-19
dc.subject
PANDEMIC IMPACT
dc.subject
HEALTH SYSTEM CAPACITY
dc.subject
PANDEMIC RESPONSE
dc.title
Overconfident
en
dc.title.subtitle
How Economic and Health Fault Lines Left the Middle East and North Africa Ill-Prepared to Face COVID-19
en
dc.type
Serial
en
okr.date.disclosure
2021-10-07
okr.doctype
Publications & Research
okr.doctype
Publications & Research :: Publication
okr.googlescholar.linkpresent
yes
okr.identifier.doi
10.1596/978-1-4648-1798-4
okr.identifier.report
164920
okr.language.supported
en
okr.region.administrative
Middle East and North Africa
okr.region.geographical
Middle East
okr.region.geographical
North Africa
okr.topic
Energy :: Oil & Gas
okr.topic
Health, Nutrition and Population :: Disease Control & Prevention
okr.topic
Macroeconomics and Economic Growth :: Business Cycles and Stabilization Policies
okr.topic
Macroeconomics and Economic Growth :: Commodities
okr.topic
Macroeconomics and Economic Growth :: Economic Growth
okr.topic
Macroeconomics and Economic Growth :: Fiscal & Monetary Policy
okr.unit
MNACE

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