• Home
  • About MESH
  • Members
  • Papers
  • Contact

Middle East Strategy at Harvard

National Security Studies Program :: Weatherhead Center

Feed on
Posts
Comments

‘Arab Economies in the Twenty-First Century’

Mar 16th, 2009 by MESH

MESH invites selected authors to offer original first-person statements on their new books—why and how they wrote them, and what impact they hope and expect to achieve. Paul Rivlin is senior fellow at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle East and African Studies of Tel Aviv University. His new book is Arab Economies in the Twenty-First Century.

From Paul Rivlin

My book brings together two areas of research.

The first is an investigation into the balance between resources and needs in the Arab world. Resources can be thought of as the economy that provides the goods and services that a country requires; needs can be interpreted as the population, its age structure and growth. The reality is more complex because one of the factors of production is labor, which means that population is therefore part of supply as well as the source of demand.

The balance between supply and demand is crucially affected by changes in the age structure of the population. The proportion of those of working-age to the young and old (who do not work) in the Arab world is favorable at present and offers these countries the opportunity to develop with lower costs in terms of investment in education, health and other welfare expenditures. The working-age population is still growing more rapidly than the population as a whole, and this will continue for at least another decade. There is an increasing need for jobs, but if they are available, then more workers will be able to support relatively fewer dependents.

But over time this will change as the share of the elderly population increases, something that already presents serious challenges in Europe and Japan. Indeed, Arab population growth already has slowed in the last decade. That will push up costs and reduce the share of the population that can carry the burden.

So far, Arab countries have not taken advantage of this “demographic transition” or “demographic gift” in the way that East and Southeast Asian countries did in the 1970s and 1980s. Research has emphasized the major contribution that demographic transition made to rapid economic development in those regions. The danger is that in the Arab world, this temporary phase will pass and demographic trends will become more burdensome again.

The second area of research is part of what might be called the new economic history of the Middle East. In recent years, a number of economists and economic historians have attempted to provide new explanations for the poor economic performance of the region. They have examined religion, culture, institutions, geography, law, international relations and internal politics in ways that once were a taboo and, for some, remain so. This literature helps to provide answers to the questions that my first research area posed: why are such deep and prolonged imbalances permitted? These imbalances manifest themselves in high poverty rates, growing inequalities in income and wealth distribution, malnutrition and rates of illiteracy. Given the threats to stability that they pose, why have governments not been more effective? This book offers an explanation.

Order from Publisher | Amazon | Excerpt

  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Technorati
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit

Posted in Books, Demography, Economics | No Comments

Comments are closed.

  • This Site

    Middle East Strategy at Harvard (MESH) is a project of the National Security Studies Program at the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs.
    • Read about MESH
    • Search MESH with Google
    • Receive MESH by email
  • Latest Posts

    • • ‘A Question of Command’ by Mark Moyar
    • • Will more sanctions against Iran work? by Raymond Tanter
    • • Lebanon on UN Security Council by David Schenker
    • • Whither Yemen? by Mark N. Katz
    • • Saudis into Yemen by Daniel Byman
    • • Disrupting Iran’s weapons smuggling by Matthew Levitt
  • Comments

    MESH invites comments from its members and other analysts.
    • Read about comments
  • Latest Comments

    • Walter Reich on Bungled again: Israel and Goldstone
    • J. Scott Carpenter on Farewell and thanks
    • Michele Dunne on Farewell and thanks
    • Robert Satloff on Farewell and thanks
    • Stephen Peter Rosen and Martin Kramer on Farewell and thanks
  • Subscribe

    Subscribe to MESH by email Posts+Comments
    Feed Posts+Comments
    Subscribe to MESH by email Posts+Comments
    Posts+Comments
    AddThis Feed Button
  • RSS MESH Pointers

  • Posts by Category

    • Administration (5)
    • Announcements (23)
    • Countries (247)
      • Afghanistan (11)
      • Arab Gulf (11)
      • Bahrain (1)
      • Caucasus (5)
      • Central Asia (2)
      • China (3)
      • Egypt (25)
      • France (2)
      • India (1)
      • Iran (78)
      • Iraq (36)
      • Israel (95)
      • Jordan (9)
      • Lebanon (28)
      • Pakistan (8)
      • Palestinians (52)
      • Qatar (1)
      • Russia (12)
      • Saudi Arabia (14)
      • Syria (18)
      • Turkey (15)
      • United Kingdom (3)
      • Yemen (5)
    • Members (267)
      • Adam Garfinkle (22)
      • Alan Dowty (19)
      • Andrew Exum (11)
      • Barry Rubin (14)
      • Bernard Haykel (9)
      • Bruce Jentleson (6)
      • Charles Hill (3)
      • Chuck Freilich (15)
      • Daniel Byman (17)
      • David Schenker (16)
      • Gal Luft (9)
      • Harvey Sicherman (11)
      • Hillel Fradkin (8)
      • J. Scott Carpenter (15)
      • Jacqueline Newmyer (6)
      • Jon Alterman (13)
      • Josef Joffe (17)
      • Joshua Muravchik (10)
      • Mark N. Katz (21)
      • Mark T. Clark (15)
      • Mark T. Kimmitt (6)
      • Martin Kramer (24)
      • Matthew Levitt (15)
      • Michael Doran (4)
      • Michael Horowitz (9)
      • Michael Mandelbaum (12)
      • Michael Reynolds (14)
      • Michael Rubin (8)
      • Michael Young (16)
      • Michele Dunne (16)
      • Philip Carl Salzman (32)
      • Raymond Tanter (17)
      • Robert O. Freedman (20)
      • Robert Satloff (17)
      • Soner Cagaptay (4)
      • Stephen Peter Rosen (13)
      • Steven A. Cook (14)
      • Tamara Cofman Wittes (18)
      • Walter Laqueur (20)
      • Walter Reich (11)
    • Subjects (271)
      • Academe (3)
      • Books (40)
      • Counterinsurgency (14)
      • Culture (21)
      • Democracy (16)
      • Demography (5)
      • Diplomacy (19)
      • Economics (1)
      • European Union (3)
      • Geopolitics (42)
      • Hamas (21)
      • Hezbollah (25)
      • Intelligence (9)
      • Islam in West (5)
      • Islamism (16)
      • Maps (27)
      • Media (5)
      • Military (19)
      • Nuclear (26)
      • Oil and Gas (14)
      • Public Diplomacy (10)
      • Qaeda (23)
      • Sanctions (7)
      • Taliban (3)
      • Technology (2)
      • Terminology (9)
      • Terrorism (30)
      • United Nations (7)
  • Archives

    • December 2009 (1)
    • November 2009 (13)
    • October 2009 (8)
    • September 2009 (9)
    • August 2009 (9)
    • July 2009 (9)
    • June 2009 (12)
    • May 2009 (16)
    • April 2009 (11)
    • March 2009 (16)
    • February 2009 (11)
    • January 2009 (10)
    • December 2008 (12)
    • November 2008 (11)
    • October 2008 (19)
    • September 2008 (15)
    • August 2008 (17)
    • July 2008 (18)
    • June 2008 (12)
    • May 2008 (17)
    • April 2008 (20)
    • March 2008 (27)
    • February 2008 (19)
    • January 2008 (18)
    • December 2007 (19)
  • MESH Bookstore


    Recently featured:


  • Maps

    • Online atlas in construction
    Latest additions:
    Scriptless Flickr Badge Scriptless Flickr Badge
    Scriptless Flickr Badge Scriptless Flickr Badge
    Scriptless Flickr Badge Scriptless Flickr Badge
  • RSS Latest Iran

    • • Official: Iran needs 20 enrichment sites (AP)
    • • US envoy to discuss Iran, climate on visit to Asia (AFP)
    • • AP sources: US eyes January for new Iran sanctions (AP)
    • • Iran cracks down on dissent in universities (AP)
    • • UK sailors held by Iran return to Britain (AP)
  • RSS Latest Levant

    • • Saudi oil minister: oil prices 'perfect' (AP)
    • • Israeli stalling blocks Shalit deal: Hamas (AFP)
    • • Israel closes sole oil and gas terminal on Gaza border (The Christian Science Monitor)
    • • Four added to FBI most wanted list for 1989 hijacking (AFP)
    • • Jordan summons Israel envoy over Jerusalem church (AFP)
  • RSS Latest Iraq

    • • Ex-UN weapons inspector condemns Blair, Bush on Iraq (AFP)
    • • Ex-ambassador to Iraq named dean of A&M school (AP)
    • • Soldier charged in 2 NY murders had dead man's car (AP)
    • • Iranian group: Health care blocked at Iraq camp (AP)
    • • Iraq buys border security system for Iran, Syria frontiers (AFP)
  • RSS New York Times

    • • G.I.’s Learning to Stand Down as Iraqis Step In
    • • Names of the Dead
    • • News Analysis: Similarities to Iraq Surge Plan Mask Risks in Afghanistan
    • • Iran Sets Limit To What It Tells Atomic Agency
    • • At Least 3 Die in Syria Blast; Officials Call It an Accident
  • RSS Washington Post

    • • In Yemen, plight of child brides endures
    • • In Iraq, din of war gives way to mundanities of withdrawal
    • • Netanyahu's West Bank plan meets resistance from settlers
    • • Suicide bomber kills senior Iraqi police official, 4 others in Tikrit
    • • Iran frees 5 Britons whose yacht drifted into its waters
  • RSS NPR

    • • Lending Likely To Cool After Dubai Debt Woes
    • • Settlers Reject Netanyahu Plea To Reduce Tensions
    • • Saudis Flee Border Fighting With Yemen Rebels
    • • Israeli Police Arrest Settlement Leader In West Bank
    • • Iran Frees Five British Sailors Detained At Sea
  • Harvard Events

    Check upcoming events from the calendars of...
    • Weatherhead Center for International Affairs
    • Center for Middle Eastern Studies (CMES)
    • Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs
  • RSS Weatherhead

    • • Conflict Prevention and 'Provention' in Theory and Practice: The EU Model Co-sponsored by the Southeastern Europe Study Group, Minda de...
    • • The Role of Track 1 Actors in Reconciliation: The UN in Iraq
    • • Writing a Successful Grant Proposal for Summer Research
  • RSS CMES

    • • The Middle East Forum: "Syria: Pivotal or Pariah State?"
    • • From Social Democracy to Islamic-Ottoman Multiculturalism: Origins of the Historic Reforms in State Policies Towards Ethnicity
    • • 2009-2010 Egypt Forum program
    • • Destinies Apart: Jewish Immigrants from the Atlas Mountains and from Ethiopia, Moshe Shokeid
  • RSS Belfer

    • • Nuclear Proliferation, Energy Security, Iran and Afghanistan: A European Perspective
    • • Two Concepts of Liberty: American Grand Strategy and the Liberal Tradition
    • • The League of Nations in...New Jersey? How International Networks Reshaped U.S. Views for a Postwar World
  • Sponsor

  • Host

  • Rights

    Copyright © 2007-2009 President and Fellows of Harvard College
    Site Meter

Theme: MistyLook by Sadish


Protected by Akismet • Blog with WordPress

Bad Behavior has blocked 1 access attempts in the last 7 days.