Economic Policy Reforms 2011
Going for Growth
The global recovery from the deepest recession since the Great Depression is under way, but it remains overly dependent on macroeconomic policy stimulus and has not yet managed to significantly reduce high and persistent unemployment in many countries. Going for Growth 2011 highlights the structural reforms needed to restore long-term growth in the wake of the crisis. For each OECD country and, for the first time, six key emerging economies (Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Russia and South Africa), five reform priorities are identified that would be most effective in delivering sustained growth over the next decade. The analysis shows that many of these reforms could also assist much-needed fiscal consolidation and contribute to reducing global current account imbalances.
The internationally comparable indicators provided here enable countries to assess their economic performance and structural policies in a wide range of areas.
In addition, this issue contains three analytical chapters covering housing policies, the efficiency of health care systems and the links between structural policies and current account imbalances.
Also available in: French
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Click to download PDF - 8.00MBPDF
Ireland
Ireland has experienced a severe set-back in living standards. Unemployment has risen steeply and labour force participation declined, resulting in a labour utilisation gap relative to the upper half of OECD countries. While the government is launching reforms aimed at improving macroprudential regulation, efforts in the areas below should be pursued to raise long-term growth prospects and avoid a structural deterioration in the labour market.
Also available in: French
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Click to download PDF - 288.45KBPDF