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Rabah Arezki
By Rabah Arezki - Mar 09,2024
ALGIERS — Before the outbreak of COVID-19, Africa experienced 25 years of uninterrupted economic expansion, prompting analysts to proclaim that the continent’s growth momentum was no longer dependent on its extractive industries.
By Rabah Arezki - Aug 05,2023
WASHINGTON, DC — Shortly after taking office on May 29, Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu surprised many observers by implementing a series of bold reforms.
By Rabah Arezki - Jan 26,2023
WASHINGTON, DC — Multilateral development banks (MDBs) have become the darling of policymakers nowadays.
By Rabah Arezki - Jan 18,2023
WASHINGTON, DC — Egypt is on the brink of a financial and economic abyss.
By Rabah Arezki - Aug 28,2022
ABIDJAN  —  The global economy has entered a new age of national security. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the vulnerability caused by overreliance on global supply chains and the failure of coordination in tackling global health risks.
By Rabah Arezki - Mar 14,2022
ABIDJAN  —  At the end of the 1980s, political liberalisation swept across Africa, seemingly indicating that it was the continent’s turn to embark on history’s inexorable march towards democracy.
By Rabah Arezki - Aug 17,2020
WASHINGTON, DC — Many countries across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) remain stuck in the transition from an administered to a market economy.
By Rabah Arezki - Feb 20,2020
WASHINGTON, DC — In a 2015 speech, Mark Carney, the outgoing governor of the Bank of England, sparked a debate about whether monetary policymakers should look beyond the horizon of the business and credit cycles to ensure financial stability in light of the risks posed by cl
By Rabah Arezki - Apr 18,2019
WASHINGTON, DC — Algeria faces the herculean task of transforming its economy to meet the pressing demands of a young, growing, and increasingly restless population.
By Rabah Arezki - Jun 08,2018
WASHINGTON, DC — Since January 2016, when oil prices ended a sharp two-year slide, the price of crude has more than doubled. As a rule, higher prices are bad for oil-importing countries and good for oil producers.


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