Iraq Economic Monitor, Fall 2021 : The Slippery Road to Economic Recovery
The fall 2021 issue of the Iraq Economic Monitor provides an in-depth review of the latest macroeconomic and policy developments amidst a global recovery in international oil markets and as COVID-19 restrictions begin to ease. As a result, the monitor finds that the economic prospects for Iraq have improved, with GDP projected to grow from 2.6 percent in 2021 to exceed 6 percent in 2022-23, turning both fiscal and external deficits into surpluses. Nevertheless, upstream risks like oil shocks, droughts, and new COVID-19 variants; coupled with fiscal risks like growing budget rigidities, slow clearance of arrears, large exposure of state-owned banks and the central bank to the sovereign, and public investment management constraints that impact public service delivery can all materialize anytime to turn the tide as Iraq’s recent history has repeatedly shown. The breadth and depth of these challenges underscore the need for an accelerated implementation of structural reforms by the new government along the lines of the White of Paper. The Special Focus of the report discusses water scarcity and the degradation of water quality in Iraq. It highlights the large losses water issues impose across multiple sectors of the economy and the impact on vulnerable people. Indeed, a 20 percent reduction in water supply with changes in crop yields could reduce real GDP in Iraq by up to 4 percent, or US$6.6 billion. The monitor highlights the importance of dealing with those issues to reduce fragilities and identifies three reform areas to improve resilience to water scarcity and climate change impacts through water efficiency, productivity, and demand management policies; institutional solutions; and regional solutions.
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Format: | Report biblioteca |
Language: | English |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2021-11
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Subjects: | ECONOMIC GROWTH, OIL AND GAS, PUBLIC FINANCE, EXTERNAL SECTOR, MONETARY POLICY, ECONOMIC OUTLOOK, RISK, WATER SCARCITY, CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT, WATER SECTOR, WATER DEMAND, WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, WATER UTILITIES, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/981071637593726857/Iraq-Economic-Monitor-The-Slippery-Road-to-Economic-Recovery http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36620 |
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dig-okr-10986366202021-11-30T05:10:43Z Iraq Economic Monitor, Fall 2021 : The Slippery Road to Economic Recovery World Bank ECONOMIC GROWTH OIL AND GAS PUBLIC FINANCE EXTERNAL SECTOR MONETARY POLICY ECONOMIC OUTLOOK RISK WATER SCARCITY CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT WATER SECTOR WATER DEMAND WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT WATER UTILITIES The fall 2021 issue of the Iraq Economic Monitor provides an in-depth review of the latest macroeconomic and policy developments amidst a global recovery in international oil markets and as COVID-19 restrictions begin to ease. As a result, the monitor finds that the economic prospects for Iraq have improved, with GDP projected to grow from 2.6 percent in 2021 to exceed 6 percent in 2022-23, turning both fiscal and external deficits into surpluses. Nevertheless, upstream risks like oil shocks, droughts, and new COVID-19 variants; coupled with fiscal risks like growing budget rigidities, slow clearance of arrears, large exposure of state-owned banks and the central bank to the sovereign, and public investment management constraints that impact public service delivery can all materialize anytime to turn the tide as Iraq’s recent history has repeatedly shown. The breadth and depth of these challenges underscore the need for an accelerated implementation of structural reforms by the new government along the lines of the White of Paper. The Special Focus of the report discusses water scarcity and the degradation of water quality in Iraq. It highlights the large losses water issues impose across multiple sectors of the economy and the impact on vulnerable people. Indeed, a 20 percent reduction in water supply with changes in crop yields could reduce real GDP in Iraq by up to 4 percent, or US$6.6 billion. The monitor highlights the importance of dealing with those issues to reduce fragilities and identifies three reform areas to improve resilience to water scarcity and climate change impacts through water efficiency, productivity, and demand management policies; institutional solutions; and regional solutions. 2021-11-29T15:14:12Z 2021-11-29T15:14:12Z 2021-11 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/981071637593726857/Iraq-Economic-Monitor-The-Slippery-Road-to-Economic-Recovery http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36620 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Economic Updates and Modeling Middle East and North Africa Iraq |
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biblioteca |
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Biblioteca del Banco Mundial |
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English |
topic |
ECONOMIC GROWTH OIL AND GAS PUBLIC FINANCE EXTERNAL SECTOR MONETARY POLICY ECONOMIC OUTLOOK RISK WATER SCARCITY CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT WATER SECTOR WATER DEMAND WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT WATER UTILITIES ECONOMIC GROWTH OIL AND GAS PUBLIC FINANCE EXTERNAL SECTOR MONETARY POLICY ECONOMIC OUTLOOK RISK WATER SCARCITY CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT WATER SECTOR WATER DEMAND WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT WATER UTILITIES |
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ECONOMIC GROWTH OIL AND GAS PUBLIC FINANCE EXTERNAL SECTOR MONETARY POLICY ECONOMIC OUTLOOK RISK WATER SCARCITY CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT WATER SECTOR WATER DEMAND WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT WATER UTILITIES ECONOMIC GROWTH OIL AND GAS PUBLIC FINANCE EXTERNAL SECTOR MONETARY POLICY ECONOMIC OUTLOOK RISK WATER SCARCITY CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT WATER SECTOR WATER DEMAND WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT WATER UTILITIES World Bank Iraq Economic Monitor, Fall 2021 : The Slippery Road to Economic Recovery |
description |
The fall 2021 issue of the Iraq
Economic Monitor provides an in-depth review of the latest
macroeconomic and policy developments amidst a global
recovery in international oil markets and as COVID-19
restrictions begin to ease. As a result, the monitor finds
that the economic prospects for Iraq have improved, with GDP
projected to grow from 2.6 percent in 2021 to exceed 6
percent in 2022-23, turning both fiscal and external
deficits into surpluses. Nevertheless, upstream risks like
oil shocks, droughts, and new COVID-19 variants; coupled
with fiscal risks like growing budget rigidities, slow
clearance of arrears, large exposure of state-owned banks
and the central bank to the sovereign, and public investment
management constraints that impact public service delivery
can all materialize anytime to turn the tide as Iraq’s
recent history has repeatedly shown. The breadth and depth
of these challenges underscore the need for an accelerated
implementation of structural reforms by the new government
along the lines of the White of Paper. The Special Focus of
the report discusses water scarcity and the degradation of
water quality in Iraq. It highlights the large losses water
issues impose across multiple sectors of the economy and the
impact on vulnerable people. Indeed, a 20 percent reduction
in water supply with changes in crop yields could reduce
real GDP in Iraq by up to 4 percent, or US$6.6 billion. The
monitor highlights the importance of dealing with those
issues to reduce fragilities and identifies three reform
areas to improve resilience to water scarcity and climate
change impacts through water efficiency, productivity, and
demand management policies; institutional solutions; and
regional solutions. |
format |
Report |
topic_facet |
ECONOMIC GROWTH OIL AND GAS PUBLIC FINANCE EXTERNAL SECTOR MONETARY POLICY ECONOMIC OUTLOOK RISK WATER SCARCITY CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT WATER SECTOR WATER DEMAND WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT WATER UTILITIES |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
Iraq Economic Monitor, Fall 2021 : The Slippery Road to Economic Recovery |
title_short |
Iraq Economic Monitor, Fall 2021 : The Slippery Road to Economic Recovery |
title_full |
Iraq Economic Monitor, Fall 2021 : The Slippery Road to Economic Recovery |
title_fullStr |
Iraq Economic Monitor, Fall 2021 : The Slippery Road to Economic Recovery |
title_full_unstemmed |
Iraq Economic Monitor, Fall 2021 : The Slippery Road to Economic Recovery |
title_sort |
iraq economic monitor, fall 2021 : the slippery road to economic recovery |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2021-11 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/981071637593726857/Iraq-Economic-Monitor-The-Slippery-Road-to-Economic-Recovery http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36620 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT worldbank iraqeconomicmonitorfall2021theslipperyroadtoeconomicrecovery |
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1756576008560967680 |