Eruptions of Popular Anger

Eruptions of Popular Anger: The Economics of the Arab Spring and Its Aftermath sets out to answer three puzzles—the “Arab inequality” puzzle of civil uprisings in countries with low-to-moderate and stagnant economic inequality, the “unhappy development” paradox of increasing dissatisfaction at a time of moderate-to-rapid development, and the paradox of political violence in middle-income countries. The book’s empirical investigation rules out high and rising inequality as a reason for the Arab Spring uprisings. It shows that the real problem was the erosion in middle-class incomes and the growing dissatisfaction with the quality of life, the shortage of formal sector jobs, and corruption. Frustration was particularly high among the young, educated, middle-class residents in urban areas. The old social contract, which had delivered development results in the past and under which Arab governments provided public-sector jobs and subsidized services in return for subdued voice, was unsustainable and malfunctioning. The public sector could no longer be the employer of choice, but the private sector did not generate enough formal sector jobs, because of distortions that constrained its growth and policies that offered advantages to a few firms with political connections, limiting competition and private investment. The breakdown in the social contract increased the premium on freedom and created impetus for political change. This report shows that the Arab Spring revolutions and the subsequent spread of violence and civil wars in the post–Arab Spring Middle East and North Africa region can be traced to the broken social contract, institutional weaknesses, and regional divisions in societies polarized along ethnic and sectarian lines. The Arab Spring and its aftermath indicate the need for a new social contract under which governments promote private-sector job creation, design public services in a way that holds providers accountable to beneficiaries, and promote inclusion and good governance.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ianchovichina, Elena
Format: Book biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2018
Subjects:INEQUALITY, WELFARE DYNAMICS, SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING, SATISFACTION, SOCIAL CONTRACT, POLITICAL VIOLENCE, ARAB SPRING, PROTESTS, POLARIZATION, CIVIL WAR, GOVERNANCE,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10986/28961
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spelling dig-okr-10986289612024-08-09T08:10:36Z Eruptions of Popular Anger The Economics of the Arab Spring and Its Aftermath Ianchovichina, Elena INEQUALITY WELFARE DYNAMICS SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING SATISFACTION SOCIAL CONTRACT POLITICAL VIOLENCE ARAB SPRING PROTESTS POLARIZATION CIVIL WAR GOVERNANCE Eruptions of Popular Anger: The Economics of the Arab Spring and Its Aftermath sets out to answer three puzzles—the “Arab inequality” puzzle of civil uprisings in countries with low-to-moderate and stagnant economic inequality, the “unhappy development” paradox of increasing dissatisfaction at a time of moderate-to-rapid development, and the paradox of political violence in middle-income countries. The book’s empirical investigation rules out high and rising inequality as a reason for the Arab Spring uprisings. It shows that the real problem was the erosion in middle-class incomes and the growing dissatisfaction with the quality of life, the shortage of formal sector jobs, and corruption. Frustration was particularly high among the young, educated, middle-class residents in urban areas. The old social contract, which had delivered development results in the past and under which Arab governments provided public-sector jobs and subsidized services in return for subdued voice, was unsustainable and malfunctioning. The public sector could no longer be the employer of choice, but the private sector did not generate enough formal sector jobs, because of distortions that constrained its growth and policies that offered advantages to a few firms with political connections, limiting competition and private investment. The breakdown in the social contract increased the premium on freedom and created impetus for political change. This report shows that the Arab Spring revolutions and the subsequent spread of violence and civil wars in the post–Arab Spring Middle East and North Africa region can be traced to the broken social contract, institutional weaknesses, and regional divisions in societies polarized along ethnic and sectarian lines. The Arab Spring and its aftermath indicate the need for a new social contract under which governments promote private-sector job creation, design public services in a way that holds providers accountable to beneficiaries, and promote inclusion and good governance. 2017-12-06T15:28:47Z 2017-12-06T15:28:47Z 2018 Book Livre Libro 978-1-4648-1152-4 https://hdl.handle.net/10986/28961 English MENA Development Report; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf Washington, DC: World Bank
institution Banco Mundial
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country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
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region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic INEQUALITY
WELFARE DYNAMICS
SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING
SATISFACTION
SOCIAL CONTRACT
POLITICAL VIOLENCE
ARAB SPRING
PROTESTS
POLARIZATION
CIVIL WAR
GOVERNANCE
INEQUALITY
WELFARE DYNAMICS
SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING
SATISFACTION
SOCIAL CONTRACT
POLITICAL VIOLENCE
ARAB SPRING
PROTESTS
POLARIZATION
CIVIL WAR
GOVERNANCE
spellingShingle INEQUALITY
WELFARE DYNAMICS
SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING
SATISFACTION
SOCIAL CONTRACT
POLITICAL VIOLENCE
ARAB SPRING
PROTESTS
POLARIZATION
CIVIL WAR
GOVERNANCE
INEQUALITY
WELFARE DYNAMICS
SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING
SATISFACTION
SOCIAL CONTRACT
POLITICAL VIOLENCE
ARAB SPRING
PROTESTS
POLARIZATION
CIVIL WAR
GOVERNANCE
Ianchovichina, Elena
Eruptions of Popular Anger
description Eruptions of Popular Anger: The Economics of the Arab Spring and Its Aftermath sets out to answer three puzzles—the “Arab inequality” puzzle of civil uprisings in countries with low-to-moderate and stagnant economic inequality, the “unhappy development” paradox of increasing dissatisfaction at a time of moderate-to-rapid development, and the paradox of political violence in middle-income countries. The book’s empirical investigation rules out high and rising inequality as a reason for the Arab Spring uprisings. It shows that the real problem was the erosion in middle-class incomes and the growing dissatisfaction with the quality of life, the shortage of formal sector jobs, and corruption. Frustration was particularly high among the young, educated, middle-class residents in urban areas. The old social contract, which had delivered development results in the past and under which Arab governments provided public-sector jobs and subsidized services in return for subdued voice, was unsustainable and malfunctioning. The public sector could no longer be the employer of choice, but the private sector did not generate enough formal sector jobs, because of distortions that constrained its growth and policies that offered advantages to a few firms with political connections, limiting competition and private investment. The breakdown in the social contract increased the premium on freedom and created impetus for political change. This report shows that the Arab Spring revolutions and the subsequent spread of violence and civil wars in the post–Arab Spring Middle East and North Africa region can be traced to the broken social contract, institutional weaknesses, and regional divisions in societies polarized along ethnic and sectarian lines. The Arab Spring and its aftermath indicate the need for a new social contract under which governments promote private-sector job creation, design public services in a way that holds providers accountable to beneficiaries, and promote inclusion and good governance.
format Book
topic_facet INEQUALITY
WELFARE DYNAMICS
SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING
SATISFACTION
SOCIAL CONTRACT
POLITICAL VIOLENCE
ARAB SPRING
PROTESTS
POLARIZATION
CIVIL WAR
GOVERNANCE
author Ianchovichina, Elena
author_facet Ianchovichina, Elena
author_sort Ianchovichina, Elena
title Eruptions of Popular Anger
title_short Eruptions of Popular Anger
title_full Eruptions of Popular Anger
title_fullStr Eruptions of Popular Anger
title_full_unstemmed Eruptions of Popular Anger
title_sort eruptions of popular anger
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10986/28961
work_keys_str_mv AT ianchovichinaelena eruptionsofpopularanger
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