Guinea-Bissau Country Economic Memorandum : Terra Ranca! A Fresh Start
Author(s)
World BankKeywords
RETURNSDIVERSIFICATION
BUDGET SURPLUS
HOLDING
SMALL BUSINESSES
MICROFINANCE
FREE TRADE
INSURANCE
ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
FINANCIAL SECTOR
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
HOUSEHOLDS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
BUSINESS PLAN
DIVIDENDS
NPL
RETURN
OIL
TAX REVENUE
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
GREEN REVOLUTION
FISCAL DEFICIT
FORESTRY
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
POPULATION GROWTH
CAPITAL MARKETS
VENTURE CAPITAL
RULE OF LAW
GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP
DEFORESTATION
SMALL FARMERS
FISCAL POLICIES
MINES
FINANCIAL MARKET
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
MARKET PARTICIPANTS
MONETARY FINANCING
MOBILE PHONE
UNION
ACCOUNTING
WAGES
INFLATION
PHYSICAL CAPITAL
MONETARY FUND
LDCS
FISHERIES
VILLAGE
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
NON-PERFORMING LOANS
SAFETY NET
HUMAN RESOURCES
RECESSION
ECONOMIC GROWTH
AGRICULTURE
SHOCKS TO INCOME
COMMERCIAL BANKS
BRIBE
FISHING
GOVERNMENT INVESTMENT
ARREARS
RECEIPTS
CENTRAL BANK
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
LOW INCOME COUNTRIES
INTANGIBLE
EXPORT EARNINGS
ACCESS TO FINANCE
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
EXCHANGE RATE
MICRO-FINANCE
DEBT BURDEN
COOPERATIVES
BENEFICIARIES
MICRO-ENTERPRISES
CURRENCY
FINANCIAL CRISIS
DEVELOPMENT BANK
NATIONAL INCOME
GDP
INDUSTRIALIZATION
FINANCIAL SUSTAINABILITY
TRANSPARENCY
GROWTH POTENTIAL
DEBT MANAGEMENT
CAPACITY BUILDING
GENDER EQUALITY
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS
SOURCE OF INCOME
ACCESS TO BANKING SERVICES
TIMBER
GOVERNMENT FINANCES
CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT
CARBON
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ACCESS TO BANKING
REMITTANCES
FARMERS
TAX REVENUES
GOVERNMENT CAPACITY
MOBILE PHONES
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
MFI
TERMS OF TRADE
MARKET FAILURES
BROAD MONEY
AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION
GENDER
ACCOUNTABILITY
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
EXTREME POVERTY
DONOR SUPPORT
LABOR COSTS
GDP DEFLATOR
FISH
INSTITUTIONAL REFORM
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
FARMER
NATURAL RESOURCES
MARKET PRICES
NUTRITION
REAL EXCHANGE RATE
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TRUST FUND
GOVERNANCE REFORM
RENEWABLE RESOURCES
HOUSEHOLD INCOMES
LABOR PRODUCTIVITY
WEALTH
WITHDRAWAL
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
TRADING
CURRENT ACCOUNT
COMPETITIVENESS
INCOME GROWTH
GOVERNMENT SAVINGS
ECONOMICS
BARTER
FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION
MONETARY POLICY
DEBT RELIEF
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
EXPORTER
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
PUBLIC DEBT
LACK OF COLLATERAL
CASH TRANSFERS
ECONOMIC SECTORS
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
RENT SEEKING
PURCHASING POWER PARITY
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
FAMILY INCOMES
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
POLITICAL STABILITY
LOGGING
PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP
ACCESS TO MARKETS
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
PRIVATE INVESTORS
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
PRODUCERS
EMISSIONS
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
LABOR MARKET
INSTRUMENT
INVESTING
NONPERFORMING LOANS
FISCAL POLICY
OUTREACH
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC DIFFICULTY
NATURAL CAPITAL
KEY CHALLENGE
INFORMAL ECONOMIES
ECONOMIC SITUATION
EXPORTS
CIVIL SOCIETY
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
TRADING BLOCS
GOVERNMENT BONDS
FAMILIES
ENTREPRENEURS
REGULATORY AUTHORITY
CAPITAL ACCESS
EXPENDITURE
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS
CRIME
LOCAL ECONOMY
EXPLOITATION
SETTLEMENT
REAL WAGES
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
ETHNIC GROUPS
ACCESS TO CREDIT
ENABLING ENVIRONMENT
DEBT
TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY
GOVERNMENT REVENUE
LABOR FORCE
ENVIRONMENTAL
TREASURY
GROSS NATIONAL SAVINGS
PURCHASING POWER
ADVISORY SERVICES
EXPORTERS
MICROFINANCE INSTITUTION
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
BANK ACCOUNTS
GDP PER CAPITA
PUBLIC POLICY
REAL GDP
SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT
CREDIT FACILITY
HUMAN CAPITAL
MACROECONOMICS
PUBLIC GOOD
STOCKS
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY
CORRUPTION
DEPOSITS
TAX
EQUILIBRIUM
FISCAL BURDEN
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATION
PUBLIC FINANCES
VALUE ADDED
CLEAN DEVELOPMENT MECHANISM
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21599Abstract
After decades of turmoil and instability, a period of calm and progress evolved in Guinea-Bissau in 2009. A military coup in April 2012 interrupted it. A fresh start is needed to alter the dynamics that kept Guinea-Bissau poor. In 2013, Gross National Income per capita was US$590. Average economic growth barely kept pace with population growth. In 2010, poverty at the national poverty line of US$2 a day was 70 percent; extreme poverty at US$1 a day was 33 percent. These numbers have increased from their 2002 levels and they are estimated to have increased further since 2010. It is time to make a fresh start and turn the page on anemic growth and poverty. Guinea-Bissau s elections of May and June 2014 are described by many observers as the freest and fairest in the country s history. Voter registration and turnout were at record-levels. The conditions for progress and stability are favorable. Guinea-Bissau is a rural economy, almost entirely dependent on a single cash crop: cashew. It is the main source of income for most of the country s poor. Cashew nuts are Guinea-Bissau s main export, accounting for 85 to 90 percent of the country s total exports. The balance of payments is dominated by cashew, on the export side, and food and fuel, among imports. The economy is open, with exports and imports by land and sea amounting to more than 70 percent of GDP. Shocks to cashew, rice and oil prices have a considerable effect on the current account balance. Official Development Assistance (ODA) makes a critical contribution to supporting the state budget. In 2011, Guinea-Bissau ranked 20th among the world s most aid dependent countries. Recently, policy mistakes aggravated an already dire situation. However, the 2014 cashew campaign was been better than the 2013 campaign, and the prospects for a pick-up in growth have improved.Date
2015-03-12Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/21599http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21599
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CC BY 3.0 IGORelated items
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