Economic crisis in the Arab world

Authors

Overseas Development Institute

Keywords:

Economics, Economic growth, Foreign policy, Governance, Private sector, Public finance, Middle East and North Africa, Egypt

Synopsis

This Briefing Paper considers the causes of the economic crisis of the 1980s against the background of fluctuating oil fortunes and new political movements in the Arab states. Some of the poor Arab countries, such as Yemen, Jordan and Algeria seem to have suffered substantially from the Gulf War outcome, although others such as Egypt have gained. The Gulf war may have marked the end of attempts to achieve cohesion in the Arab world through economic means, although it did trigger a sudden unexpected recovery of Arab aid flows. The paper concludes that, after the long boom, the countries of the Arab world face a difficult adjustment period, when falling living standards may lead to further political instability.

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Published

1 March 1992

Online ISSN

0140-8682

Details about this monograph

Publication date (01)

1992

doi

10.61755/BMPF3895