Africa-Press – Mauritius. Mauritius’ best strategy for economic recovery post-pandemic includes both temporary support to firms and households, and comprehensive reforms to address pre-existing structural challenges, says the World Bank’s latest economic analysis for the country.
The Mauritius Country Economic Memorandum, Through the Eye of a Perfect Storm – Coming Back Stronger from the Covid-19 Crisis, says the crisis presents policy makers with an opportunity to confront long-standing challenges.
The report highlights four main pillars for a strong recovery:
A new industrial policy approach that focuses state support on innovation and technology transfer, while addressing cross-cutting issues in skills development, competition, natural resource management, and public private partnerships to promote productive private sector investment.
Reversing the ongoing decline in competitiveness by leveraging foreign direct investment and new preferential trade opportunities to upgrade exports, while focusing Covid-19 support measures on managing the fallout from the pandemic in the short term.
Maintaining Mauritius’ inclusive development path will require renewed and more comprehensive efforts to promote labour market participation, especially for low educated women and youth, and more attention to early childhood and second chance education.
Moving resources from the overly generous basic pension system to more targeted and effective anti-poverty programmes would help cope with the increased social needs and reduced fiscal space.
Further strengthening of the public sector, in terms of policy coherence in complex, multi-sector reforms, and implementation capacity. Close collaboration with the private sector is also key.
(worldbank.
org 26/5)
Unemployment: Statistics Mauritius on May 19th indicated that the unemployment figures increased by 12,500 from 39,700 in 2019 to 52,200 in 2020 resulting in an unemployment rate of 9.2%. The figure was made up 10,700 males and 1,800 females.
In its latest economic bulletin on Labour Force, Employment and Unemployment for the year 2020, it said that from 2019 to 2020, the male unemployment rate increased from 4.4% to 7.8% and female unemployment rate rose from 10.2% to 11.1%.
Furthermore, it said the unemployment rate in 2020 was highest in the lowest age group (16 to 24 years) with a rate of 26.1% (23.2% for male and 29.6% for female) and decreased progressively with increasing age.
(PANA 19/5)

Volume58, Issue5
July 2021
Pages 23441A-23441A
Related
Information
Recommended
International Covid‐19 Responses
Africa Research Bulletin: Economic, Financial and Technical Series
Breeding of the Trindade Petrel Pterodroma arminjoniana on Round Island, Mauritius
ANDREW S.
GARDNER, CALLAN D. DUCK, SUSAN GREIG
Ibis
The role of T‐cell immunity in COVID‐19 severity amongst people living with type II diabetes
Zhen Wei Marcus Tong, Emma Grant, Stephanie Gras, Melanie Wu, Corey Smith, Helen L.
Barrett, Linda A. Gallo, Kirsty R. Short
The FEBS Journal
Recently extinct reptile populations from Mauritius and Réunion, Indian Ocean
E. N. Arnold
Journal of Zoology
Literature and Hybridity in Mauritius and Réunion
Anjali Prabhu
A Companion to African Literatures, [1]