This document provides an overview of economic thought and policymaking in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region based on a survey of economists. It discusses key topics like the impact of ideas on policy formulation, different schools of economic thought, the main tasks of economic policymakers, and examples of "bad ideas" that led to economic catastrophes. The survey findings suggest that while economists from different schools disagree on theoretical and empirical questions, economic policy is shaped both by prevailing ideas and real-world conditions.
Rana Hendy - Doha Institute
Mahmoud Mohieldin - World Bank
ERF 25th Annual Conference
Knowledge, Research Networks & Development Policy
10-12 March, 2019
Kuwait City, Kuwait
What is Political Economy?
Different types of Economic Systems and its influence on planning process
Capitalism and Capitalist Planning Model
Communism and Communist Planning Model
Socialism and Socialist Planning Model
The institution economics became a predominant analytical perspective for developmental national experiences. The economic success or failure has been predominantly explained by the role played by institutions. This approach has particularly been applied to the national experiences where natural resources are abundant and form their main source of exports. Irrespective of this structural dimension, so follows the argument, countries can escape from the “commodity trap” associated to this resource endowment if good institutions can transform this natural asset in an opportunity to foster investment and spread development to other areas and sectors. In these analyses the good economic institutions are normally considered the set of institutions that were supposed to be predominant in developed market economies. This paper considers critically this analysis building its main arguments in two steps. It will be argued that the consolidation of private interests on production of natural resource limit their use for general development economic purpose but it will be argued also that this possibility exists in oil and gas and other strategic mineral raw material when by geopolitical reasons a national vested interest is formed as predominant economic power. Nevertheless this requires an encompassing industrial policy. These arguments will be illuminated by comparisons between Russia, and Venezuela.
Politics and Power in International Development - The potential role of Political Economy Analysis
Geert Laporte, Deputy Director, ECDPM
VIDC, Vienna, 30 January 2014
Rana Hendy - Doha Institute
Mahmoud Mohieldin - World Bank
ERF 25th Annual Conference
Knowledge, Research Networks & Development Policy
10-12 March, 2019
Kuwait City, Kuwait
What is Political Economy?
Different types of Economic Systems and its influence on planning process
Capitalism and Capitalist Planning Model
Communism and Communist Planning Model
Socialism and Socialist Planning Model
The institution economics became a predominant analytical perspective for developmental national experiences. The economic success or failure has been predominantly explained by the role played by institutions. This approach has particularly been applied to the national experiences where natural resources are abundant and form their main source of exports. Irrespective of this structural dimension, so follows the argument, countries can escape from the “commodity trap” associated to this resource endowment if good institutions can transform this natural asset in an opportunity to foster investment and spread development to other areas and sectors. In these analyses the good economic institutions are normally considered the set of institutions that were supposed to be predominant in developed market economies. This paper considers critically this analysis building its main arguments in two steps. It will be argued that the consolidation of private interests on production of natural resource limit their use for general development economic purpose but it will be argued also that this possibility exists in oil and gas and other strategic mineral raw material when by geopolitical reasons a national vested interest is formed as predominant economic power. Nevertheless this requires an encompassing industrial policy. These arguments will be illuminated by comparisons between Russia, and Venezuela.
Politics and Power in International Development - The potential role of Political Economy Analysis
Geert Laporte, Deputy Director, ECDPM
VIDC, Vienna, 30 January 2014
Developmental state and africa elly series 2013.Should Africa Learn from Asia...Elly Twineyo Kamugisha
Is Africa currently in the developmental stage? Is it on its way to economic success and ultimately development and liberal democracy?
Does the role of the state in the development of East Asian countries offer good examples for Africa?
Is the state in developed countries supporting or subsiding key private companies in their economies?
Political economy embraces the complex political nature of decision making to investigate how power and authority affect economic choices in a society. Political economy analysis offers no quick fixes but leads to smarter engagement.
The euro crisis has been extensively discussed in terms of economics, finance, political intrigues, and European Institutions, but a key aspect—the political economy of the crisis—has received little attention. Politicians and social scientists from emerging economies, especially Eastern Europe, look with amazement at this oversight.
Authored by: Anders Aslund
Published in 2011
The 20th anniversary of the beginning of economic reforms in Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union provides a good opportunity to comment on the lessons of transition says Andrei Shleifer, a Professor of Economics at Harvard University. He made a top seven list, which might be useful to future reformers. Some of the issues are relevant not only for communist countries; the problems of heavily statist economies are similar.
Authored by: Andrei Shleifer
Published in 2012
Strategy formation and policy making in government powerpoint showUniversity of Tampere
The show represents macro government strategies in orienting public policy between economy government and civil society. The show contains strategic orientations of public agencies in the micro level of government. Both macro and micro strategies represent strategy modes of strategic desgin, internal strategic scanning and strategic governance. The show contains links to references and by clicking the pictures you'll find more usefull and entertaining material. The content is based on the book Strategy formation and policy making in government, published By Palgrave in 2019.
Developmental state and africa elly series 2013.Should Africa Learn from Asia...Elly Twineyo Kamugisha
Is Africa currently in the developmental stage? Is it on its way to economic success and ultimately development and liberal democracy?
Does the role of the state in the development of East Asian countries offer good examples for Africa?
Is the state in developed countries supporting or subsiding key private companies in their economies?
Political economy embraces the complex political nature of decision making to investigate how power and authority affect economic choices in a society. Political economy analysis offers no quick fixes but leads to smarter engagement.
The euro crisis has been extensively discussed in terms of economics, finance, political intrigues, and European Institutions, but a key aspect—the political economy of the crisis—has received little attention. Politicians and social scientists from emerging economies, especially Eastern Europe, look with amazement at this oversight.
Authored by: Anders Aslund
Published in 2011
The 20th anniversary of the beginning of economic reforms in Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union provides a good opportunity to comment on the lessons of transition says Andrei Shleifer, a Professor of Economics at Harvard University. He made a top seven list, which might be useful to future reformers. Some of the issues are relevant not only for communist countries; the problems of heavily statist economies are similar.
Authored by: Andrei Shleifer
Published in 2012
Strategy formation and policy making in government powerpoint showUniversity of Tampere
The show represents macro government strategies in orienting public policy between economy government and civil society. The show contains strategic orientations of public agencies in the micro level of government. Both macro and micro strategies represent strategy modes of strategic desgin, internal strategic scanning and strategic governance. The show contains links to references and by clicking the pictures you'll find more usefull and entertaining material. The content is based on the book Strategy formation and policy making in government, published By Palgrave in 2019.
1IntroductionWHY DID NO ONE SEE IT COMINGOn 5 Nov.docxaulasnilda
1
Introduction
WHY DID NO ONE SEE IT COMING?
On 5 November 2008, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II was opening a new building at the London School of
Economics. Speaking of the credit crunch, she turned to some of the economists present and said, `It's awful. Why
did no one see it coming?' Journalists, not constrained to be diplomatic, were more forthright in condemning
economists. For Anatol Kaletsky, one-time economics editor of the Times, `Economists are the guilty men' (the
Times 5 February 2009). The economics editor of the Guardian, Larry Elliott, claimed that `as a profession,
economics not only has nothing to say about what caused the world to come to the brink of financial collapse ... but
also a supreme lack of interest' (the Guardian 1 June 2009). Writing in the same newspaper, Simon Jenkins
attributed this failure to the fact that `Economists regard it as their duty fearlessly to offer government what it wants
to hear. ... Don't rock the boat, says the modern profession, and the indexed pension is secure. The whole economics
profession, he contended, had `suffered a collapse (12 November 2008).
Even more significantly, prominent economists have argued that the profession has gone astray. Nobel Laureate
Paul Krugman, whose academic career has taken him through some ofthe world's leading economics departments -
MIT, Yale and Princeton - has endorsed the view that blame for the crisis falls on economists as well as on
financiers, bankers and policy makers. His assessment is that `the economics profession went astray because
economists, as a group, mistook beauty, clad in impressive-looking mathematics, for truth' (New York Times 6
September 2009). The charge is serious because Krugman is arguing not just that economists got something wrong
but also that their failure was deeply rooted in values that are at the heart of the profession.
These are not isolated criticisms. They reflect widely held attitudes, not just in Britain, but also in the United
States, Europe and, no doubt, in most countries affected by the economic crisis. Following one of the biggest
economic policy failures since the 1930s, the economics profession is getting a bad press. Yet only a few years ago,
the image it presented to the public was very different - that of a discipline that was not just successful but also
overflowing with confidence. Economics was the key to understanding everything, as the titles appearing in
bookstalls revealed: Everlasting Light Bulbs: How Economics Illuminates the World (Kay 2004); Freakonomics: A
Rogue Economist Explains the Hidden Side of Everything (Levitt and Dubner 2006); More Sex Is Safer Sex: The
Unconventional Wisdom of Economics (Landsburg 2007); The Logic of Life: The New Economics of Everything
(Harford 2008); The Economic Naturalist: Why Economics Explains Almost Everything (Frank 2008).
The changed attitude towards economics is hardly surprising. The forces that drive the economy from boom to
depression and back again ...
1IntroductionWHY DID NO ONE SEE IT COMINGOn 5 Nov.docxherminaprocter
1
Introduction
WHY DID NO ONE SEE IT COMING?
On 5 November 2008, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II was opening a new building at the London School of
Economics. Speaking of the credit crunch, she turned to some of the economists present and said, `It's awful. Why
did no one see it coming?' Journalists, not constrained to be diplomatic, were more forthright in condemning
economists. For Anatol Kaletsky, one-time economics editor of the Times, `Economists are the guilty men' (the
Times 5 February 2009). The economics editor of the Guardian, Larry Elliott, claimed that `as a profession,
economics not only has nothing to say about what caused the world to come to the brink of financial collapse ... but
also a supreme lack of interest' (the Guardian 1 June 2009). Writing in the same newspaper, Simon Jenkins
attributed this failure to the fact that `Economists regard it as their duty fearlessly to offer government what it wants
to hear. ... Don't rock the boat, says the modern profession, and the indexed pension is secure. The whole economics
profession, he contended, had `suffered a collapse (12 November 2008).
Even more significantly, prominent economists have argued that the profession has gone astray. Nobel Laureate
Paul Krugman, whose academic career has taken him through some ofthe world's leading economics departments -
MIT, Yale and Princeton - has endorsed the view that blame for the crisis falls on economists as well as on
financiers, bankers and policy makers. His assessment is that `the economics profession went astray because
economists, as a group, mistook beauty, clad in impressive-looking mathematics, for truth' (New York Times 6
September 2009). The charge is serious because Krugman is arguing not just that economists got something wrong
but also that their failure was deeply rooted in values that are at the heart of the profession.
These are not isolated criticisms. They reflect widely held attitudes, not just in Britain, but also in the United
States, Europe and, no doubt, in most countries affected by the economic crisis. Following one of the biggest
economic policy failures since the 1930s, the economics profession is getting a bad press. Yet only a few years ago,
the image it presented to the public was very different - that of a discipline that was not just successful but also
overflowing with confidence. Economics was the key to understanding everything, as the titles appearing in
bookstalls revealed: Everlasting Light Bulbs: How Economics Illuminates the World (Kay 2004); Freakonomics: A
Rogue Economist Explains the Hidden Side of Everything (Levitt and Dubner 2006); More Sex Is Safer Sex: The
Unconventional Wisdom of Economics (Landsburg 2007); The Logic of Life: The New Economics of Everything
(Harford 2008); The Economic Naturalist: Why Economics Explains Almost Everything (Frank 2008).
The changed attitude towards economics is hardly surprising. The forces that drive the economy from boom to
depression and back again.
DELETE INFLATION AS CAUSE OF CONCEPT OF THE NATION'S ECONOMIC SYSTEMSetiono Winardi
OBJECTIVE
1. Align local exchange rates with foreign currencies.
2. Prospering the whole society in real life.
3. Eliminate the modern colonial system in the form of economic colonization of a State by the Capitalist State.
4. Eliminate foreign debt for a nation or country.
5. Optimizing the use of all resources owned by a country in developing modern civilization in a real way for the benefit of all levels of society.
BENEFIT
1. Equality of local currency exchange rates against foreign currencies.
2. Eliminate economic colonization by the Capitalist State.
3. Equality of degrees and culture of a nation in human rights when interacting with the international community.
4. The maintenance of natural resources owned by a nation as an inheritance for future generations.
5. The spread of poverty that will hit most countries.
Core Macroeconomic Concepts in Historical ContextAsad Zaman
Theories emerge as attempts to analyze and solve problems facing societies. Thus they are best understood within their historical context. What problem was faced, how it was analyzed, what solutions were adopted and how they turned out. This is different from the "scientific" approach which treats theories as universal laws without historical context. This lecture describes macroeconomic theories within their historical context. For Video Lecture based on these slides, see: https://youtu.be/qrApOBntDGM
GLOBALIZATION and The Globalization Paradox: Why Global Markets, States, and ...tesfa7
is the process of interaction and integration among people, companies, and governments worldwide (en.m.Wikipedia.org). The authors of the articles discussed that;
Impacts of Globalization on developing and developed countries
Faire economic distribution and employment opportunities
National government demands to frame their policy aligned with international environmental laws and regulations
Solution Manual for Microeconomics, 17th edition by Christopher T.S. Ragan C...Donc Test
Solution Manual for Microeconomics, 17th edition by Christopher T.S. Ragan Complete Verified Chapter's.docx
Solution Manual for Microeconomics, 17th edition by Christopher T.S. Ragan Complete Verified Chapter's.docx
Global Political Economy: How The World Works?Jeffrey Harrod
These are the slides which are displayed by the lecturer Jeffrey Harrod in the on-line Lecture Course "Global Political Economy: How the World Works" which is available free on his website http://www.jeffreyharrod.eu/avcourse.html.
The purpose it to make the slides available to download which at the moment cannot be done from the on-line lecture. Many of the slides provide data which may be useful in presentations and research papers. Other slides are the points addressed in the lecture.
The course covers all the material conventionally found in courses on international political economy. The approach is critical and realist and seeks to understand or explain
power rather than functions which surround the world economy.
The lectures and slides cover investment, trade, finance , migration and labour paying special attention to the multinational corporation and the agencies of states as the central power players in the global economy.
Lecture given on September 20, 2010 in Bratislava within Conservative Economic Quarterly Lecture Series /CEQLS/ by
Tim Evans, Chief Executive of the Cobden Centre,
Chairman of the Economic Policy Centre,
a Consultant Director with the Adam Smith Institute and
President of the Libertarian Alliance
Solution Manual for Microeconomics, 17th edition by Christopher T.S. Ragan C...mwangimwangi222
Solution Manual for Microeconomics, 17th edition by Christopher T.S. Ragan Complete Verified Chapter's.docx
Solution Manual for Microeconomics, 17th edition by Christopher T.S. Ragan Complete Verified Chapter's.docx
Solution Manual for Microeconomics, 17th edition by Christopher T.S. Ragan Complete Verified Chapter's.docx
Currently pi network is not tradable on binance or any other exchange because we are still in the enclosed mainnet.
Right now the only way to sell pi coins is by trading with a verified merchant.
What is a pi merchant?
A pi merchant is someone verified by pi network team and allowed to barter pi coins for goods and services.
Since pi network is not doing any pre-sale The only way exchanges like binance/huobi or crypto whales can get pi is by buying from miners. And a merchant stands in between the exchanges and the miners.
I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi merchant. I and my friends has traded more than 6000pi coins successfully
Tele-gram
@Pi_vendor_247
Introduction to Indian Financial System ()Avanish Goel
The financial system of a country is an important tool for economic development of the country, as it helps in creation of wealth by linking savings with investments.
It facilitates the flow of funds form the households (savers) to business firms (investors) to aid in wealth creation and development of both the parties
The secret way to sell pi coins effortlessly.DOT TECH
Well as we all know pi isn't launched yet. But you can still sell your pi coins effortlessly because some whales in China are interested in holding massive pi coins. And they are willing to pay good money for it. If you are interested in selling I will leave a contact for you. Just telegram this number below. I sold about 3000 pi coins to him and he paid me immediately.
Telegram: @Pi_vendor_247
how can I sell pi coins after successfully completing KYCDOT TECH
Pi coins is not launched yet in any exchange 💱 this means it's not swappable, the current pi displaying on coin market cap is the iou version of pi. And you can learn all about that on my previous post.
RIGHT NOW THE ONLY WAY you can sell pi coins is through verified pi merchants. A pi merchant is someone who buys pi coins and resell them to exchanges and crypto whales. Looking forward to hold massive quantities of pi coins before the mainnet launch.
This is because pi network is not doing any pre-sale or ico offerings, the only way to get my coins is from buying from miners. So a merchant facilitates the transactions between the miners and these exchanges holding pi.
I and my friends has sold more than 6000 pi coins successfully with this method. I will be happy to share the contact of my personal pi merchant. The one i trade with, if you have your own merchant you can trade with them. For those who are new.
Message: @Pi_vendor_247 on telegram.
I wouldn't advise you selling all percentage of the pi coins. Leave at least a before so its a win win during open mainnet. Have a nice day pioneers ♥️
#kyc #mainnet #picoins #pi #sellpi #piwallet
#pinetwork
What price will pi network be listed on exchangesDOT TECH
The rate at which pi will be listed is practically unknown. But due to speculations surrounding it the predicted rate is tends to be from 30$ — 50$.
So if you are interested in selling your pi network coins at a high rate tho. Or you can't wait till the mainnet launch in 2026. You can easily trade your pi coins with a merchant.
A merchant is someone who buys pi coins from miners and resell them to Investors looking forward to hold massive quantities till mainnet launch.
I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi vendor to trade with.
@Pi_vendor_247
What website can I sell pi coins securely.DOT TECH
Currently there are no website or exchange that allow buying or selling of pi coins..
But you can still easily sell pi coins, by reselling it to exchanges/crypto whales interested in holding thousands of pi coins before the mainnet launch.
Who is a pi merchant?
A pi merchant is someone who buys pi coins from miners and resell to these crypto whales and holders of pi..
This is because pi network is not doing any pre-sale. The only way exchanges can get pi is by buying from miners and pi merchants stands in between the miners and the exchanges.
How can I sell my pi coins?
Selling pi coins is really easy, but first you need to migrate to mainnet wallet before you can do that. I will leave the telegram contact of my personal pi merchant to trade with.
Tele-gram.
@Pi_vendor_247
Falcon stands out as a top-tier P2P Invoice Discounting platform in India, bridging esteemed blue-chip companies and eager investors. Our goal is to transform the investment landscape in India by establishing a comprehensive destination for borrowers and investors with diverse profiles and needs, all while minimizing risk. What sets Falcon apart is the elimination of intermediaries such as commercial banks and depository institutions, allowing investors to enjoy higher yields.
how to swap pi coins to foreign currency withdrawable.DOT TECH
As of my last update, Pi is still in the testing phase and is not tradable on any exchanges.
However, Pi Network has announced plans to launch its Testnet and Mainnet in the future, which may include listing Pi on exchanges.
The current method for selling pi coins involves exchanging them with a pi vendor who purchases pi coins for investment reasons.
If you want to sell your pi coins, reach out to a pi vendor and sell them to anyone looking to sell pi coins from any country around the globe.
Below is the contact information for my personal pi vendor.
Telegram: @Pi_vendor_247
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Falcon stands out as a top-tier P2P Invoice Discounting platform in India, bridging esteemed blue-chip companies and eager investors. Our goal is to transform the investment landscape in India by establishing a comprehensive destination for borrowers and investors with diverse profiles and needs, all while minimizing risk. What sets Falcon apart is the elimination of intermediaries such as commercial banks and depository institutions, allowing investors to enjoy higher yields.
how can I sell my pi coins for cash in a pi APPDOT TECH
You can't sell your pi coins in the pi network app. because it is not listed yet on any exchange.
The only way you can sell is by trading your pi coins with an investor (a person looking forward to hold massive amounts of pi coins before mainnet launch) .
You don't need to meet the investor directly all the trades are done with a pi vendor/merchant (a person that buys the pi coins from miners and resell it to investors)
I Will leave The telegram contact of my personal pi vendor, if you are finding a legitimate one.
@Pi_vendor_247
#pi network
#pi coins
#money
On Ideas and Economic Policy: A Survey of MENA Economists
1. On Ideas and Economic Policy:
A Survey of MENA Economists
Rana Hendy & Mahmoud Mohieldin
with
Joelle El Sawalhi & Rebecca Spriggs
2. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed
in this paper and presentation do not necessarily reflect
the views of the World Bank, the Executive Directors of
the World Bank or the governments they represent.
Disclaimer
2
3. 1. Economic thought
2. Impact of ideas on the formulation of policy
3. Bad Ideas
4. Results of the questionnaire
5. Interview results
6. Concluding remarks
Table of contents
3
4. “Ideas when they are right and when they are wrong…”
4
Eugene Fama
2013 Nobel laureate in
economic sciences
Robert Shiller
2013 Nobel laureate in
economic sciences
James Tobin
1981 Nobel laureate in
economic sciences
Milton Friedman
1976 Nobel laureate in
economic sciences
Friedrich Hayek
1974 Nobel laureate in
economic sciences
John Maynard Keynes
British Economist
Adam Smith
Scottish Economist
Karl Marx
German Philosopher
6. Ideas, schools of thought and economic policy
Similarly, theory and policy, as noted by Skidelsky (2018), “are
moulded by the conditions of the times” with one major
exception of a topic
John Stuart Mill (1806-1873):
“One of the most disputed questions both in political science
and in practical statesmanship at this particular period relates
to the proper limits of the function of the agency of
government. At other times it has been a subject of
controversy how governments should be constituted, and
according to what principles and rules they should exercise
their authority; but it is now almost equally a question to what
departments of human affairs that authority should extend”
Economists’ choice of study develop primarily from what John
Hicks (1904-1989) called ‘concentration of attention’
6
7. Arjo Klamer (1984) interviewed leading economists from
different schools of economic thought.
In the summary of these interviews he notes that “[they] are
the very best the discipline has to offer. They nonetheless
disagree fundamentally on theoretical and empirical questions,
on policy proposals and on the ways economic issues should be
studied and settled. At times, they even have difficulty
understanding each other”.
See Arjo Klamer’s book published in 1984 under the title: The New Classical Macroeconomics:
Conversations with New Classical Economists and Their Opponents.
He interviewed Robert Lucas Jr., Thomas Sargent and Robert Townsend from what he classified
as New Classical economists. He also interviewed James Tobin, Franco Modigliani and Robert
Solow from the older generation of the Neo-Keynsians and from the younger generation, Alan
Blinder and John Taylor. From the Monetarists he interviewed Karl Brunner and from what he
described as Nonconventional economists he interviewed David Gordon and Leonard Rapping. 7
Ideas, schools of thought and economic policy
8. Adapted from Stilwell (2012). Political economy: The contest of economic ideas. (p.384)
Different political philosophies, competing schools of economic thought and
influence
8
Institutional
position
Economic interest groups
e.g. corporations
Universities
Public service
Government
‘Think-
tanks’
Media
Professional
authority
Cognitive
infrastructure
and Hirschman & Popp Berham
Humanism
SocialismLiberalism
Libertarianism
(neo-liberalism)
Liberal
democracy
Social
democracy
Revolutionary
socialism
(Marx)(Galbraith)(Keynes)(Friedman)
Neoclassical economics
Keynesian economics
Institutional economics
Marxian economics
9. Austrian Behaviouralist Classical Developmentalist Institutionalist Keynesian Marxist Neoclassical Schumpeterian
On views of the
viability of capitalism
Conceptualizing the
individual
Theorizing groups-
classes
Understanding
economic systems
Exploring how
individuals and
society interact
On defending the
free market
On the need of
government
intervention
Beyond markets
On technologies and
productivity
On the existence of
corporations
On unemployment
and recession
Adapted from Chang, H. (2015). Economics: The User’s Guide.
9
A single school or multiple schools of thought?
10. Benassy-Quere et al (2010) summarize the main tasks of economic policy makers in six
categories:
1
Economic
legislation and
enforcing the rules
of the economic
system
Budgetary decisions
which include
taxation and public
expenditure (fiscal
policy)
Issuance of the
currency and the
choice of the
monetary and
exchange rate
regime (monetary
policy and central
banking)
Production of goods
and services-
primarily health and
education services
though some
governments still
own public
enterprises
Managing crises
and fixing
problems,
including through
trying to influence
private decisions
International
negotiation and
representation
2 3 4 5 6
10Source: Benassy-Quere et al (2010), Economic policy: Facts, theories and options.
Main tasks of economic policy makers
11. Stages of economic policy formulation
Max Hartwell’s five
stages and the role of
ideas, vested interests
and interest groups:
Identification of an issue and publicizing it by a thinker
or moral entrepreneur preaching for reform.01
In a democracy, a politician or the government may
persuade the parliament that the issue needs
investigation or legislation after public inquiry and
obtain a report about it.
02
The parliament debates and may accept the report and
hence passes a legislation to be enforced by
government bureaucracy or a regulatory agency.03
The concerned bureaucracy may provide feedback on
the new legislation and a chain reaction is created.04
The legislation will have a life of its own with
interactions with the concerned public and the
legislation will have its impact through cumulative
sequence depending on the dynamics of the sector or
domain that it addresses.
05
11
Source: Hartwell et al (1989), Ideas,
Interests & Consequences.
12. Impact of ideas of economists and political philosophers
Source: Olson (1989), Barry (1989)
01
02
03
04
Karl Marx and the Soviet Union
Keynes and Kennedy/Johnson tax cuts
Change in tides… Hayek, Friedman, and Thatcher
1970s stagflation and Friedman
12
13. Ricardo and the Repeal of the Corn Laws 1846
Three sets of economic ideas in three different areas:
Source: Mukand and Rodrik (2018), The Political Economy of Ideas: On Ideas Versus
Interests in Policymaking
The Laffer Curve and the Reagan Tax Cuts of 1981
The Great Recession of 2008: Austerity Economics and Keynesian Policies
13
Ideas vs. vested interests
14. Ideas, coincidence and/or conducive circumstances (luck?!)
Keynes and White’s global economic system
Three sets of economic ideas in three different areas:
Source: Rodrik (2015), Economics rules: The rights and wrongs of the dismal science.
Vickrey and congestion pricing
Levy and the first Conditional Cash Transfer program
14
15. Bad ideas
63
2
41
8
Dealing with
joblessness by relying
on the civil service
Underpaying civil servants
compared to the private
sector
Cutting fiscal deficits by
sacrificing public
investment in
infrastructure
Subsidizing energy except
for very limited subsidies
to highly vulnerable
sections of the population
Open ended protection for
specific sectors
Imposing administrative
price controls
Banning exports
Exchange rate
misalignment
Resisting
urbanization/underinvesting
in infrastructure
Ignoring environmental
implications
Poorly regulating the
Banking sector and
excessive interference
Measuring educational
progress solely by
higher enrollments and
ignoring
the quality of
education
5
7
9
10
11
12
Sources: The Growth Report Strategies for Sustained
Growth and Inclusive Development,2008
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1209
81468138262912/pdf/449860PUB0Box3101OFFICI
AL0USE0ONLY1.pdf
Post-Crisis Growth in Developing Countries A
Special Report of the Commission on Growth and
Development on the Implications of the 2008
Financial Crisis, 2010
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/bitstream
/handle/10986/13546/52462.pdf?sequence=1&is
Allowed=y
15
16. Nine examples of economic catastrophes
16
How to Lose an Empire Without Really Trying: British Imperial Policy in North America
Acts of the British were maintained because of the ideology of mercantilism that was so deeply engrained in
the economic thought of policy makers who accepted business as usual, instead of being swayed by the
arguments of ant mercantilists such as David Hume.
Establish, Disestablish, Repeat: The First and Second Banks of the United States
America’s fear of centralized monetary authority caused it to reject two central banks, condemning the US
to three-quarters of a century punctuated by frequent financial crises.
The Great Hunger: Famine in Ireland, 1845-1852
Britain’s commitment to free markets, rather than to assist the starving in Ireland, led to one of the worst
humanitarian crises in history - the Irish famine.
The Krauts Will Pay: German Reparations after World War I
Although death and destruction afflict both sides in war, the vanquished typically suffer more than the
victors. German reparations after World War I were an unmitigated disaster but policymakers seem to have
learned after World War II.
Shackled with Golden Fetters: Britain’s Return to the Gold Standard 1925-1931
Britain’s reestablishment of the gold standard after WWI helped to turn what would otherwise be an
ordinary recession, into the Great Depression, the most severe economic crisis the industrial world has
known.
Trading Down: The Smoot-Hawley Tariff, 1930
A good example of a political party applying its “tried and true” recipe, relying on instincts rather than
analysis. A commitment to out of date ideology was at the heart of this blunder.
Why Didn’t Anyone Pull the Andon Cord? Japan’s Lost Decade
Poorly timed deregulation that contributed to a massive asset bubble that ultimately ensued in suffering of
both the financial and non-financial parts of the economy. Had Japan pulled on the Andon cord, the
consequences would have been far less severe.
The Worst Financial Crisis since the Great Depression: The Subprime Meltdown
The economic boom that preceded the subprime crisis was fueled by wrongheaded economic policy, in
particular fiscal and monetary expansion. Against rule-of-thumb monetary policy tightening, Greenspan
maintained expansionary monetary policy for a longer period than was advisable.
I’m OK. Euro Not OK?
The European sovereign debt crisis was the result of a poorly conceived economic policy choice made for a
distinctly ideological reason: the adoption of the euro.
Source: Grossman (2013), Wrong: Nine Economic
Policy Disasters and What We Can Learn from
Them.
17. Proposition USA
(1979)
Austria
(1984)
France
(1984)
Germany
(1984)
Switz.
(1984)
Canada
(1988)
UK
(1989)
A minimum wage
increases
unemployment
among young and
unskilled workers
Agree
Disagree
It depends
80
10
64
35
38
60
69
30
66
32
85
15
76
24
A ceiling on rents
reduces the
quantity and
quality of housing
available
Agree
Disagree
It depends
96
2
89
11
52
44
93
6
79
20
95
5
85
14
'Consumer
protection' laws
generally reduce
economic
efficiency
Agree
Disagree
It depends
50
46
29
70
22
77
35
65
44
56
46
52
23
77
Tariffs and import
quotas reduce
general economic
welfare
Agree
Disagree
It depends
95
3
86
13
70
27
94
6
87
10
96
4
84
15
Wage-price
controls should be
used to control
inflation
Agree
Disagree
It depends
28
71
47
52
54
43
7
92
39
61
26
73
39
60
Source: Adapted from Ricketts and Schoesmith 1990 and from the authors’ survey on MENA.
Surveys of economists opinion
17
18. First, an online survey using both survey monkey and Qualtrics software
was used. The questionnaire consisted of 29 questions and was sent to
all 355 ERF affiliates and a number of other economists from the Middle
East and North Africa (MENA) region.
Data collection: October 1, 2018 to November 15, 2018.
Second, to complement the quantitative datasets with further views and
opinions, we also conducted 20 semi-structured interviews with leading
economists from the region.
This study relies on a dataset that was compiled from a variety
of sources.
A survey of MENA economists (2018) and semi-structured interviews (2018-2019)
18
20
Semi-Structured
Interviews
50%
of
respondents
are ERF
affiliates
19. Salient characteristics
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Figure A.1: Sample Distribution by Gender
Males
70%
Females
30%
Figure A.2: Sample Distribution by Age Group
Figure A.3: Sample Distribution by Age-Group and Type of Employment
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic
Age >=71
Age 61-70
Age 51-60
Age 41-50
Age 31-40
Age 21-30
19
21. Figure 3: Belonging to a school of economic thought
59%
16%
25%
Belong to a particular school
Belong to multiplt schools
Not belonging to any school
Figure 4: Influence of Schools of Economic Thought
Classical
1%
Neoclassical
3%
New Classical
5%
Keynesian
8%
Monetarist
6%
Marxist
1%
New Keynesian
8%
Multiple
Schools
16%
Institutionalist
1%
Developmentalis
t
15%
Behaviorist
4%
Post Keynesian
3%
New
Institutionalist
4%
Don’t Belong
to Any
25%
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
21
On becoming an economist: survey results
22. Figure 5: Sample Distribution by Enjoying or Not Economics
Yes
94%
No
2%
Indifferent
4%
Figure 6: Age Distribution by whether Economists Enjoy Economics or Not
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
22
On becoming an economist: survey results
23. Figure A.5: Country of Major Economics Institution
Egypt
25%
GCC
1%
Other Arab
7%
UK & Europe
21%
US & Canada
29%
Middle East
Non-Arab
2%
Other
Countries
15%
Figure A.6: Age Distribution of Quantitative Economists
Figure A.7: Age Distribution by Schools of Economic Thought
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
23
On becoming an economist: survey results
25. 13 questions on economic policy
Q1. Are Price Ceilings on Goods and Services Beneficial?
Q2. Does Imposing a Minimum Wage Mean Lower Employment?
Q3. Is Monetary Policy Dominated by Fiscal Conditions?
Q4. Is Inflation Primarily a Monetary Phenomenon?
Q5. Can Unemployment be Reduced at a Higher Inflation Rate?
Q6. Are Cash Transfers More Effective Than In-Kind Subsidies?
Q7: Are Consumer Protection and Anti-Trust Laws Needed?
Q8. Does Corporate Social Responsibility Have a Critical Role to Play in Development?
Q9: Do Public Enterprises Have a Significant Economic Role in Modern Economies?
Q10: Is a Fixed Exchange Rate Regime Better than a Flexible one for the Purpose of Economic Stability and Development?
Q11: Is a Large Budget Deficit Bad for Economic Development?
Q12: Do Import Restrictions Through Tariffs and/or Quotas Have a Negative Economic Impact?
Q13: Is the Service Sector, as Opposed to the Manufacturing Sector, the Best Route to Economic Development?
25
26. Figure A.13: Cash Transfers are More Effective Than In-
kind Subsidies for Academic versus Non-Academic
Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 10: Cash Transfers are More Effective Than In-kind Subsidies
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It Depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q6. Are Cash Transfers More Effective Than In-Kind Subsidies?
26
13 questions on economic policy: Strong Agreement
27. Figure A.14: Consumer Protection and Anti-Trust Laws are
Needed for Academic versus Non-Academic Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 11: Consumer Protection and Anti-Trust Laws are Needed
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It Depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q7: Are Consumer Protection and Anti-Trust Laws Needed?
27
13 questions on economic policy: Strong Agreement
28. Figure A.15: Corporate Social Responsibility has a Critical Role in
Development for Academic versus Non-Academic Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 12: Corporate Social Responsibility has a Critical Role in Development
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It Depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q8. Does Corporate Social Responsibility Have a Critical Role
to Play in Development?
28
13 questions on economic policy: Strong Agreement
29. Figure A.16: Public Enterprises have a Significant Economic
Role in Modern Economies for Academic versus Non-
Academic Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 13: Public Enterprises have a Significant Economic Role in Modern Economies
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It Depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q9: Do Public Enterprises Have a Significant Economic Role in
Modern Economies?
29
13 questions on economic policy: Moderate Agreement
30. Figure A.17: A fixed Exchange Rate Regime is Better than a Flexible one for the
Purpose of Economic Stability and Development for Academic versus Non-
Academic Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 14: A fixed Exchange Rate Regime is Better than a Flexible one for the Purpose
of Economic Stability and Development
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It Depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q10: Is a Fixed Exchange Rate Regime Better than a Flexible
one for the Purpose of Economic Stability and Development?
30
13 questions on economic policy: Moderate Agreement
31. Figure A.18: A Large Budget Deficit is Bad for Economic Development
for Academic versus Non-Academic Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 15: A Large Budget Deficit is Bad for Economic Development
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It Depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q11: Is a Large Budget Deficit Bad for Economic Development?
31
13 questions on economic policy: Moderate Agreement
32. Figure A.8: Price Ceiling on Goods and Services is Beneficial for Academic versus Non-
Academic Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 5: Price Ceiling on Goods and Services is Beneficial
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q1. Are Price Ceilings on Goods and Services Beneficial?
32
13 questions on economic policy: Disagreement/It Depends
33. Figure A.9: Minimum Wage Lowers Employment Rates for Academic
versus Non-Academic Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 6: Minimum Wage Lowers Employment Rates
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It Depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q2. Does Imposing a Minimum Wage Mean Lower Employment?
33
13 questions on economic policy: Disagreement/It Depends
34. Figure A.10: Monetary Policy is Dominated by Fiscal Conditions for
Academic versus Non-Academic Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 7: Monetary Policy is Dominated by Fiscal Conditions
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It Depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q3. Is Monetary Policy Dominated by Fiscal Conditions?
34
13 questions on economic policy: Disagreement/It Depends
35. Figure A.11: Inflation is Primarily a Monetary Phenomenon for Academic
versus Non-Academic Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 8: Inflation is Primarily a Monetary Phenomenon
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It Depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q4. Is Inflation Primarily a Monetary Phenomenon?
35
13 questions on economic policy: Disagreement/It Depends
36. Figure A.12: Unemployment Can be Reduced at a Higher
Inflation Rate for Academic versus Non-Academic Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 9: Unemployment Can be Reduced at a Higher Inflation Rate
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It Depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q5. Can Unemployment be Reduced at a Higher Inflation Rate?
36
13 questions on economic policy: Disagreement/It Depends
37. Figure A.19: Import Restrictions through Tariffs and/or Quotas have a
Negative Economic Impact for Academic versus Non-Academic
Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 16: Import Restrictions through Tariffs and/or Quotas have a Negative Economic Impact
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It Depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q12: Do Import Restrictions Through Tariffs and/or Quotas
Have a Negative Economic Impact?
37
13 questions on economic policy: Disagreement/It Depends
38. Figure A.20: The Service Sector, as Opposed to the Manufacturing Sector,
is the Best Route to Economic Development for Academic versus Non-
Academic Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academic Academic Total
It depends
No
Yes
Figure 17: The Service Sector, as Opposed to the Manufacturing Sector, is
the Best Route to Economic Development
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
It Depends
No
Yes
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Q13: Is the Service Sector, as Opposed to the Manufacturing
Sector, the Best Route to Economic Development?
38
13 questions on economic policy: Disagreement/It Depends
39. Probit analysis
39
Type of
employment
(Academic vs.
Non-Academic)
ERF affiliation
Country of studiesGenderAge
1 2 3
5 6
7
Schools of
economic
thought
o Belonging to
one
o Belonging to
multiple
o Not belonging
to any
Country of
residence in
MENA
4
Controls
Outputs
questions of economic thought and
influencing policies.
13
Results
40. Figure 19: Main Challenges Facing the Region for Growth and Development
Ressources
20%
Demographic Issues
9%
Governance
34%
Macroeconomic
management
16%
Institutional issues
21%
Main challenges: survey results
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
40
41. Figure A.22: Main Challenges Facing the Region by Type of Economists
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Non-Academics Academics
Institutional issues
Macroeconomic
management
Governance
Demographic issues and
population growth
Resources
Figure A.21: Main Challenges Facing the Region by Gender
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Males Females
Institutional issues
Macroeconomic
management
Governance
Demographic issues and
population growth
Resources
Figure A.23: Main Challenges Facing the Region by Schools of Economic Thought
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Classical
Neoclassical
NewClassical
Keynesian
Monetarist
Marxist
NewKeynesian
MultipleSchools
Institutionalist
Developmentalist
Behaviorist
PostKeynesian
NewInstitutionalist
Don’tBelongtoAny
Total
Institutional issues
Macroeconomic management
Governance
Demographic issues and
population growth
Resources
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
41
Main challenges: survey results
42. Demography
Youth Unemployment
Institutions
Growth
Natural Resources
Governance
Education
Environment
External Interferences
Lack of desire for progress
Freedom of expression
Politics
Poor Macroeconomic Policy
Water
Oil
Agriculture
Enabling private sector
Underdeveloped Financial System
Lack of understanding of economic legitimacy
Low importance of research
Adjusting to transformational economic changes
Service delivery
Informality
Modernists vs conservatives
Lack of tools
Culture
Markets
Inclusiveness
Development
Main challenges: interview results
42
43. Potential solutions: survey results
Figure 20: How Should Policymakers Deal with Economic Challenges?
Institutional
Reforms
38%
Evidence-based
approach at the
microeconomic
level
8%
Structural
reforms
16%
Fiscal and
monetary policy
1%
Investment in
human capital
34%
Infrastructural
investment
3%
Note: The percentages are based on those who responded to the question.
Figure A.24: How Should Policymakers Deal with
Economic Challenges (Most Important Measure) by
Gender?
0
20
40
60
80
100
Males Females
Infrastructural
investment
Investment in
human capital
Fiscal and monetary
policy
Figure A.25: How Should Policymakers Deal with Economic
Challenges (Most Important Measure) for Academic versus
Non-Academic Economists?
0
20
40
60
80
100
Non-Academic Academic
Infrastructural
investment
Investment in
human capital
Fiscal and monetary
policy
43
44. Potential solutions: interview results
Flexible markets
Regulation
Education
Governance
Solve political problems
Knowledge-based economy
Stable and inclusive financial system
and macroeconomic environment
Invest in human capital
Institutions
Monitoring and evaluations
Expectations within policy sphere
Demography
Increase productivity factor
System distribution
Fiscal policy adjustment
Economic model that generates jobs
Efficiency in resource allocation
Diversification
Invest in infrastructure
Reduce public sector employment
Countercyclical fiscal policy
Beneficial migration channels
Financial sector reforms
New thinking on informality
Mobilizing good economists
Desire to change
Incentives to raise government savings
Priority to agriculture and manufacturing
Reducing budget deficit
Deadlines
NGO contribution
Promote democracy
Long-term development strategy
44
45. Proposition USA
(1979)
Austria
(1984)
France
(1984)
Germany
(1984)
Switz.
(1984)
Canada
(1988)
UK
(1989)
MENA
(2018)
A minimum wage
increases
unemployment
among young and
unskilled workers
Agree
Disagree
It depends
80
10
64
35
38
60
69
30
66
32
85
15
76
24
30
40
29
A ceiling on rents
reduces the
quantity and
quality of housing
available
Agree
Disagree
It depends
96
2
89
11
52
44
93
6
79
20
95
5
85
14
17
46
38
'Consumer
protection' laws
generally reduce
economic
efficiency
Agree
Disagree
It depends
50
46
29
70
22
77
35
65
44
56
46
52
23
77
89
5
6
Tariffs and import
quotas reduce
general economic
welfare
Agree
Disagree
It depends
95
3
86
13
70
27
94
6
87
10
96
4
84
15
34
19
47
Wage-price
controls should be
used to control
inflation
Agree
Disagree
It depends
28
71
47
52
54
43
7
92
39
61
26
73
39
60
42
43
15
Source: Adapted from Ricketts and Schoesmith 1990 and from the authors’ survey on MENA.
International comparisons of economic opinion
45
46. “If economists could manage to get themselves thought of as humble
competent people on a level with dentists, that would be splendid”.
Keynes (1931)
“In spite of my profound disagreement with the authoritarian political
system of Chile, I do not consider it as evil for an economist to render
technical economic advice to the Chilean Government, any more than I
would regard it as evil for a physician to give technical advice to the
Chilean Government to help end a medical plague”.
Friedman (1976)
Dentists, scientists, carpenters, engineers or social scientists
46
47. Recommendations
Recommendations
2
1
5
3
4
Advisable to introduce
regulation to ensure inclusive
policymaking (diluting vested
interest)
Interdisciplinary economic
education is needed
The internationalization of economic
ideas:
Shift to economics with a global
view, and less and less from a
national vantage point
Clear need for revision of
education to include big data
techniques, AI* and analysis
assisted by technology
Policy is/will be shaped by economists who
enter the professional sphere
47*MIT announces $1bn artificial intelligence and computing initiative
https://www.ft.com/content/06d44278-d07d-11e8-a9f2-7574db66bcd5
48. Rodrik’s 20 commandments
Ten commandments for non-economists
1. Economics is a collection of models with no predetermined
conclusions; do not let anyone tell you otherwise.
2. Do not criticize an economist’s model because of its assumptions; ask
how the results would be changed if the assumptions that seem
problematic were more realistic.
3. Analysis requires simplicity; beware of incoherence that passes itself
off as complexity.
4. Do not be put off by the math; remember economists use math not
because they are smart, but because they are not smart enough.
5. When an economist makes a recommendation, ask what makes
him/her sure the underlying model applies to the case at hand.
6. When an economists uses the term “economic welfare,” ask what s/he
means by it.
7. Do not assume what an economist says in public is the same as what
he says in the seminar room.
8. Economists don’t (all) worship markets; if they seem like they do, it’s
probably because they know better how they work than you do.
9. If you think all economists think alike, do attend one of their seminars.
10. If you think economists are especially rude to non-economists, do
attend one of their seminars.
Ten commandments for economists
1. Economics is a collection of models; cherish the diversity.
2. Remember: it’s a model, not the model.
3. Make your model simple enough to isolate how specific causes work, but not
so simple as to leave out key interactions among causes.
4. Unrealistic assumptions are OK; unrealistic critical assumptions are not OK.
5. The world is (almost) always second-best; ignore it at your peril.
6. Mapping models to real-world settings requires explicit empirical diagnostics,
which is more craft than science.
7. Do not confuse agreement among economists for certainty about how the
world works.
8. It’s OK to say “I don't know” or express range of views when asked about the
economy or policy
9. Do not forget that efficiency is not everything.
10. Do not abuse your expertise by substituting your values for the public’s.
Source: Rodrik (2015), Economics rules: The rights and wrongs of the dismal science
48
49. Concluding remarks
Many responses from our
MENA sample are those
influenced by multiple
economic schools of
thought, with
consideration for specific
contexts and shaped by
international education
01
Those who influence policy
are more likely to be older
and non-academics
Economics is increasingly
influenced by data and the
evolution of technology
02 03 04
Vested interest
influences public policy
50. Concluding remarks
Findings
Economics and economists
would benefit from
incorporating social,
economic and ethical
perspectives into their
policies (Turner 2012;
Skidelsky)
There is a clear and marked
shift from economic
ideologies to economics
underpinned by ideas
Economic policy is
influenced by the time in
which it evolved
(Keynesianism on
Kennedy; Marxism on
the Soviet Union)
Economic theories are
interdependent on one
another (Skidelsky)
50
51. The authors are very grateful to the following distinguished economists and scholars for
their acceptance to be interviewed as part of this study: Gouda Abdel-Khalek, Raja
Almarzoqi Albqami, Hassan Aly, Rabah Arezki, Rym Ayadi, Sami Ben Naceur, Adel Beshai,
Shanta Devarajan, Ibrahim El Badawi, Hazem El Beblawi, Ibrahim El Eissawy, Alia El
Mahdi, Hadi Esfahani, Ahmed Galal, Ayhan Kose, Hanan Morsy, Mustapha Nabli, Nasser
Saidi, Ismail Serageldine and Shakour Shaalan. The usual disclaimers apply. The authors
also acknowledge the Economic Research Forum and the Middle East Economic
Association for the support they provided in diffusing the online questionnaire.
Special thanks to Mariam Hoda El Maghrabi for excellent research assistance.
Acknowledgments
51
53. Megatrends
Shifts in the global
economy
Climate Change
Urbanization
Demographic
Transitions
Renewed debate
about globalization
Technological changes
Fragility
and violence
Market volatility
and commodity cycles
Opportunities
and
Challenges
Source: Forward Look 2016 53