The Arab-Israeli Conflict and the Arab Economic Prospects in the 1980’s

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Abstract: 

This study analyzes the five vital economic issues facing the Arab world on the threshold of the 1980s: the poor management of the opportunity to transform oil income into productive human and material capital; the decline of food security; the inability of any Arab country to independently avail itself of the required industrial option; the widening of the social gap between rich and poor; and Israel’s arrival at an inefficient economic level and its eventual movement towards productivity expansion—either by way of military occupation (the West Bank model) or by way of a peaceful settlement (the Camp David model). The study concludes that the greatest challenge facing the Arab world today is the use of natural resources to establish political sovereignty, economic prosperity, and social equity.

E edition: 
(Second (First, 1980
Consolidated Author: 

About the Author(s)

Atif A. KUBURSI is Professor of Economics at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, and President of Econometric Research, Ltd. He has taught at Purdue University, St. Joseph University, Beirut, and the University of Cambridge.

Translated by:Aziz Marmoura

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher(s):
Institute for Palestine Studies
Edition:
(Second (First, 1980
Publication Date:
1986
Language: Arabic
(Translated from English)
Number of Pages:
36
Table of content: