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Andre Schneider, Managing Director and Chief Operating Officer, World Economic Forum, debates a point with Anass Alami, Director-General, Caisse de Dept et de Gestion (CDG), Morocco, and Co-Chair of the World Economic Forum on the Middle East and North Africa. Image Credit: EPA

Marrakesh : An urgent need for action to secure the future prosperity of the Middle East and North Africa was the consensus clarion call on which participants brought the curtain down on the World Economic Forum in which more than 1,000 leaders from business, government, civil society and media from 62 countries participated.

The Mena region has enormous potential, participants agreed. In the final plenary "Vision for the Future", the co-chairs of the meeting expressed their views.

"The region is poised to reclaim the great leadership it showed 1,000 years ago when it was at the cutting edge of civilization," said David M. Rubenstein, Co-Founder and Managing Director, Carlyle Group, USA. If the region works together cooperatively, it can become a real emerging market leader in the 21st century.

Bridge

"With 360 million people, there is a great opportunity for regional integration," noted Shyam Sunder Bhartia, Chairman and Managing Director, Jubilant Bhartia Group, India. The MENA region is ideally situated to position itself as a bridge between dynamic Asian markets and large economies in Africa and Europe. The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) provides a useful model which should be extended.

"The Arab world has made much progress," said Lubna S. Olayan, Deputy Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer, Olayan Financing Company, Saudi Arabia; and Chair, Arab Business Council. "But further action is required to close the gender gap and reduce youth unemployment."

This is essential to building a thriving middle class — the core of any prosperous, resilient society. Failure to provide the growing ranks of low- and middle-income citizens with a sense of mobility and aspiration could lead to social instability, Olayan said.

Most importantly, improving the quality of education is critical to acquiring the skill sets necessary for the 21st century.

Initiatives

Specific initiatives include the launch of public-private partnerships in four countries to connect centres of excellence in the region. Another idea is to create a network of high schools around the Mediterranean.

Anass Alami, Director-General, Caisse de Dépôt et de Gestion (CDG), Morocco, emphasized the critical role of government "to make long-term investments and policy reforms to encourage the private sector to come in." Next year's World Economic Forum on the Middle East will be held at the Dead Sea, Jordan from May 20 to 22, 2011.