Yemen Economic Monitoring Note, Fall 2012

After almost a year of political, economic, and security upheaval, Yemen has now embarked on a new political path based on an agreement brokered by the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and overseen by the United Nations, or UN and the international c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/710451468183879234/Yemen-Economic-monitoring-note-Fall-2012
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26775
id okr-10986-26775
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-267752021-04-23T14:04:37Z Yemen Economic Monitoring Note, Fall 2012 World Bank ACCOUNTABILITY APPROACH ARREARS ASSETS AVAILABILITY BANKING SECTOR BANKING SERVICE CENTRAL BANK CONFIDENCE CORRUPTION CREDIT FACILITY CRUDE OIL CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT DEVELOPMENT BANK DIESEL ECONOMIC INTEGRATION ECONOMIC REFORMS ELECTRICITY EMPLOYMENT EXCHANGE RATE EXPENDITURE FEEDS FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FINANCIAL TRANSACTIONS FISCAL DEFICIT FISCAL POLICIES FOOD IMPORTS FOOD INSECURITY FOOD POLICY FOOD POLICY RESEARCH FOOD PRICE FOOD PRICE INFLATION FOOD SECURITY FOOD SUPPLIES FOREIGN EXCHANGE FUEL FUEL PRODUCTS GAS GOVERNMENT FINANCING HOLDING HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HYDROCARBON IMPORT COSTS INCOME INCOME GROUP INCOME TAX INFLATION INFLATION RATE INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS INSURANCE INTEREST RATES INTERNATIONAL FOOD POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE INVESTMENT CLIMATE LIFE EXPECTANCY MINISTER MONETARY POLICY MONETARY STABILITY NATURAL RESOURCES OIL OIL OUTPUT OIL PIPELINE OIL PRODUCTION OIL RESOURCES OUTPUT PATRONAGE PETROLEUM PETROLEUM PRODUCT PIPELINE PLEDGES POWER PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRIVATE SECTOR CREDIT PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT PRODUCTIVE INVESTMENT PRUDENTIAL REGULATIONS PUBLIC INVESTMENT REAL INTEREST REAL INTEREST RATE REFINERY REMITTANCES RESERVES RETURN RULING PARTY SECURITY CONCERNS SOCIAL COST SOCIAL PROTECTION STATE CAPTURE STOCKS STRUCTURAL PROBLEMS TERRORISM TRADE FINANCING TRANSPARENCY TRANSPARENCY INITIATIVE TREASURY TREASURY BONDS VOLATILITY WFP WHEAT WORLD FOOD PROGRAMME After almost a year of political, economic, and security upheaval, Yemen has now embarked on a new political path based on an agreement brokered by the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and overseen by the United Nations, or UN and the international community. The agreement was signed on November 23, 2011, after former President Saleh, the ruling party (GPC), and the opposition parties agreed to a political transition, dialogue, and political reforms. A transitional government of national unity was formed and confirmed by the Parliament in early December 2011. The transition President Hadi was elected on February, 21 2012, for the period spanning to the planned next general elections in the first half of 2014. In an environment of political tensions, the President made progress in reforming the security institutional set-up, in reducing the influence of Al-Qaeda forces, and in preparing for a national dialogue. 2017-05-30T19:42:15Z 2017-05-30T19:42:15Z 2012 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/710451468183879234/Yemen-Economic-monitoring-note-Fall-2012 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26775 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Economic Updates and Modeling Economic & Sector Work Middle East and North Africa Yemen, Republic of
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCOUNTABILITY
APPROACH
ARREARS
ASSETS
AVAILABILITY
BANKING SECTOR
BANKING SERVICE
CENTRAL BANK
CONFIDENCE
CORRUPTION
CREDIT FACILITY
CRUDE OIL
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT
DEVELOPMENT BANK
DIESEL
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
ECONOMIC REFORMS
ELECTRICITY
EMPLOYMENT
EXCHANGE RATE
EXPENDITURE
FEEDS
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
FINANCIAL TRANSACTIONS
FISCAL DEFICIT
FISCAL POLICIES
FOOD IMPORTS
FOOD INSECURITY
FOOD POLICY
FOOD POLICY RESEARCH
FOOD PRICE
FOOD PRICE INFLATION
FOOD SECURITY
FOOD SUPPLIES
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FUEL
FUEL PRODUCTS
GAS
GOVERNMENT FINANCING
HOLDING
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
HYDROCARBON
IMPORT COSTS
INCOME
INCOME GROUP
INCOME TAX
INFLATION
INFLATION RATE
INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
INSURANCE
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL FOOD POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
LIFE EXPECTANCY
MINISTER
MONETARY POLICY
MONETARY STABILITY
NATURAL RESOURCES
OIL
OIL OUTPUT
OIL PIPELINE
OIL PRODUCTION
OIL RESOURCES
OUTPUT
PATRONAGE
PETROLEUM
PETROLEUM PRODUCT
PIPELINE
PLEDGES
POWER
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRIVATE SECTOR CREDIT
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
PRODUCTIVE INVESTMENT
PRUDENTIAL REGULATIONS
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
REAL INTEREST
REAL INTEREST RATE
REFINERY
REMITTANCES
RESERVES
RETURN
RULING PARTY
SECURITY CONCERNS
SOCIAL COST
SOCIAL PROTECTION
STATE CAPTURE
STOCKS
STRUCTURAL PROBLEMS
TERRORISM
TRADE FINANCING
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPARENCY INITIATIVE
TREASURY
TREASURY BONDS
VOLATILITY
WFP
WHEAT
WORLD FOOD PROGRAMME
spellingShingle ACCOUNTABILITY
APPROACH
ARREARS
ASSETS
AVAILABILITY
BANKING SECTOR
BANKING SERVICE
CENTRAL BANK
CONFIDENCE
CORRUPTION
CREDIT FACILITY
CRUDE OIL
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT
DEVELOPMENT BANK
DIESEL
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION
ECONOMIC REFORMS
ELECTRICITY
EMPLOYMENT
EXCHANGE RATE
EXPENDITURE
FEEDS
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
FINANCIAL TRANSACTIONS
FISCAL DEFICIT
FISCAL POLICIES
FOOD IMPORTS
FOOD INSECURITY
FOOD POLICY
FOOD POLICY RESEARCH
FOOD PRICE
FOOD PRICE INFLATION
FOOD SECURITY
FOOD SUPPLIES
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FUEL
FUEL PRODUCTS
GAS
GOVERNMENT FINANCING
HOLDING
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
HYDROCARBON
IMPORT COSTS
INCOME
INCOME GROUP
INCOME TAX
INFLATION
INFLATION RATE
INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
INSURANCE
INTEREST RATES
INTERNATIONAL FOOD POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
LIFE EXPECTANCY
MINISTER
MONETARY POLICY
MONETARY STABILITY
NATURAL RESOURCES
OIL
OIL OUTPUT
OIL PIPELINE
OIL PRODUCTION
OIL RESOURCES
OUTPUT
PATRONAGE
PETROLEUM
PETROLEUM PRODUCT
PIPELINE
PLEDGES
POWER
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRIVATE SECTOR CREDIT
PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
PRODUCTIVE INVESTMENT
PRUDENTIAL REGULATIONS
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
REAL INTEREST
REAL INTEREST RATE
REFINERY
REMITTANCES
RESERVES
RETURN
RULING PARTY
SECURITY CONCERNS
SOCIAL COST
SOCIAL PROTECTION
STATE CAPTURE
STOCKS
STRUCTURAL PROBLEMS
TERRORISM
TRADE FINANCING
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPARENCY INITIATIVE
TREASURY
TREASURY BONDS
VOLATILITY
WFP
WHEAT
WORLD FOOD PROGRAMME
World Bank
Yemen Economic Monitoring Note, Fall 2012
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
Yemen, Republic of
description After almost a year of political, economic, and security upheaval, Yemen has now embarked on a new political path based on an agreement brokered by the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and overseen by the United Nations, or UN and the international community. The agreement was signed on November 23, 2011, after former President Saleh, the ruling party (GPC), and the opposition parties agreed to a political transition, dialogue, and political reforms. A transitional government of national unity was formed and confirmed by the Parliament in early December 2011. The transition President Hadi was elected on February, 21 2012, for the period spanning to the planned next general elections in the first half of 2014. In an environment of political tensions, the President made progress in reforming the security institutional set-up, in reducing the influence of Al-Qaeda forces, and in preparing for a national dialogue.
format Report
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Yemen Economic Monitoring Note, Fall 2012
title_short Yemen Economic Monitoring Note, Fall 2012
title_full Yemen Economic Monitoring Note, Fall 2012
title_fullStr Yemen Economic Monitoring Note, Fall 2012
title_full_unstemmed Yemen Economic Monitoring Note, Fall 2012
title_sort yemen economic monitoring note, fall 2012
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/710451468183879234/Yemen-Economic-monitoring-note-Fall-2012
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26775
_version_ 1764462647583965184