1 / 11

COMPETITION POLICY IN MOZAMBIQUE

COMPETITION POLICY IN MOZAMBIQUE. REGIONAL CONFERENCE OF CUTS 7Up3 PROJECT 27-28 March Addis Ababa. Achieved peace and macro-stability Growth as averaged almost 9% since 1996 PARPA envisages poverty reduction of 50-70% PARPA goals require average growth of about 8% for decade 2000-2010 .

cain
Télécharger la présentation

COMPETITION POLICY IN MOZAMBIQUE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. COMPETITION POLICY IN MOZAMBIQUE REGIONAL CONFERENCE OF CUTS 7Up3 PROJECT 27-28 March Addis Ababa

  2. Achieved peace and macro-stability Growth as averaged almost 9% since 1996 PARPA envisages poverty reduction of 50-70% PARPA goals require average growth of about 8% for decade 2000-2010 INTRODUTION

  3. THE HISTORICAL AND ECONOMIC SETING • Following its emergence from colonialism in 1974, the Mozambican economy was a virtually closed economy. • Since the end of the 1980´s, Mozambique Government sistematically directed its efforts towards an increased liberalization of its economy and a broader roll for the private sector.

  4. THE HiSTORICAL AND ECONOMIC SETING • Mozambique’s active steps towards a successful stabilization measures such as fiscal adjustment, monetary restrains and are devaluation of the exchange rate. • The objectives of the Mozambican reform were to propel the nation towards increased competitiveness, growth and improved leaving standards

  5. THE STORICAL AND ECONOMIC SETING • Price liberalization has been vigorous and comprehensive in 1986, products with fixed prices accounted for about 70% of GDP.

  6. INSTITUTIONAL AND ECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS • Thus, determination on the type of policy best suited for Mozambique it is important to identify its salient problems, such as: - Tariff and non-tariff barriers: the emergence and persistence of pressure groups

  7. INSTITUTIONAL AND ECONOMIC CONSIDERATIONS -Small markets and minimum efficient scale economies-unavailability of firm level data -the weakness and limitations of a judicial system -Limited human capital and resources -leak of a market culture

  8. OPTIMAL COMPETITION POLICY FOR MOZAMBIQUE • Mozambique competition policy should: • Contains advocacy tools to challenge anticompetitive behavior by the government. • Contains consumer protection elements that dovetail with its overall goal of speaking for consumers.

  9. OPTIMAL COMPETITION POLICY FOR MOZAMBIQUE 3. Represents a voice for market forces often at odds with the government, often at odds with the private sector The main focus of a Mozambican competition policy should to: -Remove blockages to increased trade and to move the Mozambican economy along a part towards integration in to world economic

  10. OPTIMAL COMPETITION POLICY FOR MOZAMBIQUE • Prohibition on price fixing would represent the core antitrust policy • Begin developing a competition policy • Examine alternatives to competition law enforcement • Plan for a competition agency

  11. CONCLUSION Having a competition law extends this benefit, because of the increased transparence that is provided for examining competition problems.

More Related