Quelles réformes de l’administration publique dans le contexte post-COVID-19 : Expériences croisées

March 10, 2021

La crise sanitaire sans précédent que connait actuellement le monde a mis en exergue les failles structurelles des systèmes médicaux dans les pays développés, à cause des choix dictés par l’idéologie ultra-libérale et qui ont abouti à des coupes budgétaires sombres, notamment dans le secteur de la santé publique. Cette crise devrait modifier profondément les rôles de l’Etat. L’Etat joue traditionnellement plusieurs rôles : d’actionnaire à travers la prise de participation dans des entreprises, de développeur/stratège à travers l’allocation de ressources dans des secteurs qu’il considère judicieux de développer, de facilitateur/régulateur à travers la mise en place d’un environnement des affaires sain et sûr et de protecteur, à travers la protection des personnes et des biens (sécurité et protection sociale). De cette manière, l’Etat assume son rôle de décideur à travers la définition des grandes orientations et des choix stratégiques et la conduite de politiques publiques ayant pour objectif de développer un climat favorable de confiance et de mettre en place les conditions propices au progrès économique et social. Dans les mois et années qui viennent, les rôles de protecteur (sur le plan social), de stratège/développeur et de régulateur de l’Etat devraient se renforcer. A ce titre, nous devrions assister au retour en force de l’Etat Providence, pourtant si décrié ces trente dernières années –mis à part la courte parenthèse post-crise 2008. Cet Etat providence se caractérise actuellement, à l’échelle mondiale, par la mise en place de plans massifs de relance pratiqués par les pays afin de procéder au redressement de leurs économies en général. Ces plans de relance, généreusement dotés en termes de budget, se singularisent par le fait qu’ils agissent de manière concomitante sur l’offre, à travers le soutien aux entreprises, et sur la demande, à travers le soutien au pouvoir d’achat des ménages.

Speakers
TARIK EL MALKI
Président de l’Édition 2020 du Symposium et de l’ADIMAP, Directeur de l’ISCAE-Rabat, Maroc
...

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    December 6, 2018
    This Policy Paper aims to provide a better understanding of the drivers of youth unemployment in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region by examining some common factors and then delving deeper into the case of Morocco, a relatively stable country that has historically been a source of large emigration, especially towards Europe. The MENA region has some of the highest total and youth unemployment rates in the world. High youth unemployment is especially worrisome because it ...
  • Authors
    Haizam Amirah Fernández
    Ignacio Cembrero
    Irene Fernández Molina
    December 4, 2018
    “What are the sources of tension in the Spain-Morocco relationship?” "¿Cuáles son los focos de tensión en la relación España-Marruecos?” ("What are the sources of tension in the Spain-Morocco relationship?”) is a Spanish-written article featured in the independent international-news analysis group Estudios de Política Exterior, providing an examination of Spanish-Moroccan relations written by four authors, namely OCP Policy Center's Senior Fellow, Rachid El Houdaigui. ...
  • Authors
    Tiago Ribeiro dos Santos
    December 3, 2018
    Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson caught policymaker’s attention to the critical role of institutions for development. Their work gives too much emphasis to the prospects of revolution, however. A reading of the World Bank’s World Development Report of 2017 points to directions that all actors involved in the process, whether domestic or international, elite or non-elite, can take to improve societies. ...
  • Authors
    December 3, 2018
    “LEARN TO LIVE IN A WORLD WHERE AMERICA HAS NO ALLIES” In a review about the novel, Night of Camp David, published by the New York Times in 1965, a critic called the book “too plausible for comfort.” Nineteen sixty-five, ironically, was the same year that the “American congress passed the 25th Amendment, which provides a mechanism for removing a president who is deemed unfit to serve,” as reminded Alexandra Alter in the NYT article. An unknown writer, a high-ranking advisor of the ...
  • November 29, 2018
    - Emerging market economies (EMs), as a group, continue to exhibit solid growth. This is the case especially in Asia and among oil-exporters, supported by growth in the advanced economies, the recovery in world trade, and the resilience of non-oil commodity prices. - However, financial markets have become very nervous about the prospects for several EM, reflecting specific weaknesses in several countries – Argentina and Turkey stand out - and the prospect of higher international in ...
  • Authors
    Nchimunya Hamukoma
    Nicola Doyle
    Archimedes Muzenda
    November 29, 2018
    The twin cities of Rabat and Salé on Morocco’s west coast embody prominence in Morocco’s past and present, Rabat as capital and Salé as the third most populous city. Less than 20 years ago, however, Salé was charac¬terised by large slums, high unemployment, poor service delivery and limited mobility. Today, it is a changed city, providing housing to the majority of Rabat’s working class, with a modern tram linking the two cities. Morocco’s ‘Cities without Slums’ programme, launched ...
  • Authors
    Yana Myachenkova
    November 27, 2018
    - The trade agreements that the European Union has with North African countries – with Algeria, Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia – are often seen as having delivered disappointing results since they came into force during the 2000s. The four North African countries have seen insufficient growth in their exports to the EU, and have undergone only limited diversification. In the meantime, the EU’s exports to North Africa have grown quite rapidly. - Economic growth in North Africa has been ...
  • Authors
    Axel Berger
    Andreas Freytag
    Simon J. Evenett
    Christian von Haldenwang
    Ricardo Meléndez-Ortiz
    Raul Ochoa
    Agustin Redonda
    Karl P. Sauvant
    November 26, 2018
    *The recommendations put forth below have been published, both print and online, in the Financial Times.  The leaders of the G20 will meet on 30 November and 1 December in Buenos Aires for their annual summit. They need to acknowledge that the last two years have been characterized by strong headwinds for the world economy. This time, however, it is not a mixture of poor macroeconomic policies and bad business decisions – as in 2008 when they met in Washington for their first summi ...
  • Authors
    November 26, 2018
    Young researchers face several challenges in getting recognition for their work at the level of institutions and senior intellectual communities. Obstacles include trust issues, funding restrictions, and linguistic and cultural barriers. To these aforementioned limitations, researchers and university students from the Southern Mediterranean shore face an additional struggle, which is access to mobility. The latter is a key driver of quality in the research field. Depending on the su ...
  • Authors
    November 26, 2018
    Les cours de la quasi-totalité des métaux industriels et précieux se sont inscrits, depuis plusieurs mois, dans une dynamique baissière. Si le resserrement de la politique monétaire américaine et l’appréciation consécutive du dollar expliquent en partie cette trajectoire, c’est avant tout l’amoncellement des nuages dans le ciel macroéconomique mondial qui a pesé sur les marchés. L’escalade des tensions commerciales entre les États-Unis et, parmi d’autres pays, la Chine, ne peut être ...