Results Profile: Morocco Public Administration

Published: 16 March 2010 y., Tuesday

 

Marokas
Challenge

Between 2001 and 2008, Morocco enjoyed the benefits of sound economic management and reforms. Its growth rate doubled from the 1990s to an average of 5.1%, while per capita income also doubled to $2,850 in 2008. The country’s fiscal position also improved, with the government running surpluses averaging 0.3 % of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2007 and 2008.

However, many social indicators still lag behind those of comparable countries, particularly in the areas of poverty, equity, health and education.  The low performance of public services delivery and weak governance has contributed to the disparity between economic growth and improvements in social indicators. Public administration in Morocco has been characterized by a lack of vision on budgeting; excessive centralization; and poor civil service management, including a high-cost wage bill.


Approach

Since 2002, the government has implemented a comprehensive Public Administration Reform Support Program (PARP).  Public administration reform is viewed as a core component of improving governance and is central to reforms aimed at improving economic performance and building capacity to achieve sustained growth. 

PARP’s goal is to provide Morocco with a modern and gradually decentralized administration that can contribute to the country’s competitiveness and sustainable development.  Objectives are to improve government efficiency in budget and human resources management; consolidate and control the public payroll; and improve service delivery and simplify public procedures through e-government (since 2007).


Results

Under a reform program supported by IBRD funds and technical support, Morocco’s administrative tradition is evolving from an emphasis on legal compliance to a focus on performance.  The IBRD loan and accompanying analysis have led to development of a comprehensive medium-term framework for economic policy and institutional reform.

Reforms contributed to the improvement of budget management parameters, particularly related to execution rates of economic and social investment projects, which increased from 64% in 2002 to more than 73.5% in 2008.

The PARP strategy also entailed streamlining of the civil service, and improvement of service delivery in the social sectors.  In 2008, 89% of recruited civil servants (not counting security and military) joined the education or health sectors.  The budget allocation for civil service training has increased by 60% since 2002.

The combined effect of these measures translated into declining wage bill, which, in 2008 edged down to 10.2% of GDP compared to 10.7% the previous year.  In 2009, it stayed at the same level as in 2008, despite wage increases for low-income civil servants as part of the government’s fiscal stimulus package.

The e-government agenda is also taking hold; about 90 projects have adopted this strategy to improve public sector efficiency and transparency.


Toward the Future

A fourth Public Administration Reform loan for Morocco is currently awaiting Bank Board approval. It will support the next PARP phase and reinforce donor harmonization with the European Union and African Development Bank.

A new Bank Country Partnership Strategy (2010-2013) for Morocco includes improved service delivery to citizens as one of its pillars. Joint discussions with the Moroccan government to develop the new program are tentatively planned for spring 2010.

 

Šaltinis: www.worldbank.org
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Thursday in Parliament: Tibet, Eastern Partnership

Thursday saw MEPs talk about strengthening EU relations with Ukraine and Georgia through an Eastern partnership. more »

2008 progress reports on Croatia, Turkey, and FYROM: EP sets out its views

The EP adopted three resolutions on the candidate countries for accession and their progress in 2008, namely, Croatia, Turkey and the FYROM. more »

Obama: Optimistic about G20

Washington has been signaling that the most pressing task should be doing more to boost world economies through stimulus programs like the $787 billion Obama pushed through Congress last month. more »

Alabama shooting rampage

A 27-year-old Michael McLendon from Alabama Shot dead 10 people, including his mother and uncle, before killing himself. more »

Gigolo blackmailed BMW heiress

Helg Sgarbi admitted in court he seduced and blackmailed Susanne Klatten, heiress to the BMW car empire. more »

Tourist divers missing as boat sinks

The Thai navy is searching for six foreign tourists missing at sea after their boat sank in heavy seas near the southern resort island of Phuket. more »

Hillary Clinton at EP stresses need for climate action in Q&A exchanges

Over 800 young Europeans crowded into the European Parliament Friday morning for a Question and Answer session with new US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. more »

Obama opens healthcare drive

With strong opposition to healthcare reform coming from drug companies and insurers, getting passage of healthcare reform won't be easy. more »

Prisoners as reconciliation

Marine Corps Major General Paul Lefebvre says that about 50 prisoners are released per day and the current US prison population in Iraq has dropped from about 27,000 last year to about 14,000. more »

Afghanistan's election season

The deteriorating security situation in Afghanistan already prompted US President Barack Obama to commit an extra 17,000 American solders to Afghanistan – even before the US has come up with an overall strategy for Afghanistan. more »