Directions for Reform : A Country Economic Memorandum for Recovery and Resilience in South Sudan

South Sudan is at a crossroads in its recovery, reconstruction, and development. Having gained independence in 2011 after two protracted civil wars, the country twice relapsed into conflict: first in 2013 and again in 2016. While the economy began to recover following the 2018 peace deal, progress has stalled amidst a multitude of crises – including the COVID-19 pandemic, climate shocks, and dwindling oil production. At the same time, the broad-based rise in commodity prices due to the war in Ukraine have on balance affected South Sudan adversely. A decade after independence, South Sudan remains caught in a web of fragility and economic stagnation, with weak institutions, recurring cycles of violence, and ubiquitous poverty. Overall, the conflict is estimated to have cost South Sudan an accumulated loss in aggregate GDP of some US$81 billion during 2012 – 2018, equivalent to $11.6 billion per year on average (80 percent of 2010 GDP). Consequently, South Sudan’s real GDP per capita in 2018 was estimated at being one third of the counterfactual estimated for a non-conflict scenario. With the fragile peace deal largely holding despite challenges in implementation, the authorities initiated an ambitious reform program aimed at macroeconomic stabilization and modernization of the young country’s public financial management systems. This report discusses South Sudan’s economic performance since independence, with a focus on leveraging the country’s endowments of natural capital – oil and arable land – to support recovery and resilience. Three messages emerge from this report. First, there is a peace dividend in South Sudan. South Sudan’s real GDP per capita in 2018 was estimated at one third of the counterfactual estimated for a non-conflict scenario. Thus, maintaining peace can by itself be a strong driver of growth. Second, with better governance and accountability, South Sudan’s oil resources can drive transformation. Third, South Sudan’s chronic food insecurity could be reversed with targeted investments to improve the resilience of the agricultural sector.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2022-06-10
Subjects:PEACE NEGOTIATIONS, ARMED CONFLICT, COVID-19, NATURAL RESOURCES, NATURAL CAPITAL, FOOD INSECURITY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099040006102286710/P1691210fecb6b0ce09c300c0d1f63c6c08
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37532
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spelling dig-okr-10986375322022-06-14T05:10:38Z Directions for Reform : A Country Economic Memorandum for Recovery and Resilience in South Sudan World Bank PEACE NEGOTIATIONS ARMED CONFLICT COVID-19 NATURAL RESOURCES NATURAL CAPITAL FOOD INSECURITY South Sudan is at a crossroads in its recovery, reconstruction, and development. Having gained independence in 2011 after two protracted civil wars, the country twice relapsed into conflict: first in 2013 and again in 2016. While the economy began to recover following the 2018 peace deal, progress has stalled amidst a multitude of crises – including the COVID-19 pandemic, climate shocks, and dwindling oil production. At the same time, the broad-based rise in commodity prices due to the war in Ukraine have on balance affected South Sudan adversely. A decade after independence, South Sudan remains caught in a web of fragility and economic stagnation, with weak institutions, recurring cycles of violence, and ubiquitous poverty. Overall, the conflict is estimated to have cost South Sudan an accumulated loss in aggregate GDP of some US$81 billion during 2012 – 2018, equivalent to $11.6 billion per year on average (80 percent of 2010 GDP). Consequently, South Sudan’s real GDP per capita in 2018 was estimated at being one third of the counterfactual estimated for a non-conflict scenario. With the fragile peace deal largely holding despite challenges in implementation, the authorities initiated an ambitious reform program aimed at macroeconomic stabilization and modernization of the young country’s public financial management systems. This report discusses South Sudan’s economic performance since independence, with a focus on leveraging the country’s endowments of natural capital – oil and arable land – to support recovery and resilience. Three messages emerge from this report. First, there is a peace dividend in South Sudan. South Sudan’s real GDP per capita in 2018 was estimated at one third of the counterfactual estimated for a non-conflict scenario. Thus, maintaining peace can by itself be a strong driver of growth. Second, with better governance and accountability, South Sudan’s oil resources can drive transformation. Third, South Sudan’s chronic food insecurity could be reversed with targeted investments to improve the resilience of the agricultural sector. 2022-06-13T13:11:36Z 2022-06-13T13:11:36Z 2022-06-10 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099040006102286710/P1691210fecb6b0ce09c300c0d1f63c6c08 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37532 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Country Economic Memorandum Economic & Sector Work South Sudan
institution Banco Mundial
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countrycode US
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic PEACE NEGOTIATIONS
ARMED CONFLICT
COVID-19
NATURAL RESOURCES
NATURAL CAPITAL
FOOD INSECURITY
PEACE NEGOTIATIONS
ARMED CONFLICT
COVID-19
NATURAL RESOURCES
NATURAL CAPITAL
FOOD INSECURITY
spellingShingle PEACE NEGOTIATIONS
ARMED CONFLICT
COVID-19
NATURAL RESOURCES
NATURAL CAPITAL
FOOD INSECURITY
PEACE NEGOTIATIONS
ARMED CONFLICT
COVID-19
NATURAL RESOURCES
NATURAL CAPITAL
FOOD INSECURITY
World Bank
Directions for Reform : A Country Economic Memorandum for Recovery and Resilience in South Sudan
description South Sudan is at a crossroads in its recovery, reconstruction, and development. Having gained independence in 2011 after two protracted civil wars, the country twice relapsed into conflict: first in 2013 and again in 2016. While the economy began to recover following the 2018 peace deal, progress has stalled amidst a multitude of crises – including the COVID-19 pandemic, climate shocks, and dwindling oil production. At the same time, the broad-based rise in commodity prices due to the war in Ukraine have on balance affected South Sudan adversely. A decade after independence, South Sudan remains caught in a web of fragility and economic stagnation, with weak institutions, recurring cycles of violence, and ubiquitous poverty. Overall, the conflict is estimated to have cost South Sudan an accumulated loss in aggregate GDP of some US$81 billion during 2012 – 2018, equivalent to $11.6 billion per year on average (80 percent of 2010 GDP). Consequently, South Sudan’s real GDP per capita in 2018 was estimated at being one third of the counterfactual estimated for a non-conflict scenario. With the fragile peace deal largely holding despite challenges in implementation, the authorities initiated an ambitious reform program aimed at macroeconomic stabilization and modernization of the young country’s public financial management systems. This report discusses South Sudan’s economic performance since independence, with a focus on leveraging the country’s endowments of natural capital – oil and arable land – to support recovery and resilience. Three messages emerge from this report. First, there is a peace dividend in South Sudan. South Sudan’s real GDP per capita in 2018 was estimated at one third of the counterfactual estimated for a non-conflict scenario. Thus, maintaining peace can by itself be a strong driver of growth. Second, with better governance and accountability, South Sudan’s oil resources can drive transformation. Third, South Sudan’s chronic food insecurity could be reversed with targeted investments to improve the resilience of the agricultural sector.
format Report
topic_facet PEACE NEGOTIATIONS
ARMED CONFLICT
COVID-19
NATURAL RESOURCES
NATURAL CAPITAL
FOOD INSECURITY
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Directions for Reform : A Country Economic Memorandum for Recovery and Resilience in South Sudan
title_short Directions for Reform : A Country Economic Memorandum for Recovery and Resilience in South Sudan
title_full Directions for Reform : A Country Economic Memorandum for Recovery and Resilience in South Sudan
title_fullStr Directions for Reform : A Country Economic Memorandum for Recovery and Resilience in South Sudan
title_full_unstemmed Directions for Reform : A Country Economic Memorandum for Recovery and Resilience in South Sudan
title_sort directions for reform : a country economic memorandum for recovery and resilience in south sudan
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2022-06-10
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099040006102286710/P1691210fecb6b0ce09c300c0d1f63c6c08
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37532
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