IGEG
Institute for Global Economic Growth
By Richard W. Rahn
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published December 29, 2008
Would you invest in
When you arrive at the international airport in
The hotel experience is also not particularly pleasant, because rebuilding is going on all around you. Bombs and rockets can do a lot of damage to a modern hotel, which has the unfortunate side effect of driving away customers. And a largely empty hotel with holes in it deteriorates rapidly.
The major international hotels are in security compounds, which means they are surrounded by concrete walls and barbed wire with guards who determine who may enter.
The hotel is an odd prison - you can legally walk out without guards, armor, and armored vehicles, but Americans and other foreigners are advised not to because they are likely to become kidnapping victims - which is a strong deterrent to one's urge to roam free. A hotel having "captive guests" behaves like any monopoly and doesn't go to any great length to provide food that one looks forward to eating.
A "captive guest" is one whose life is in danger if he leaves the hotel without security, and if he leaves with security, the cost can be mighty high, i.e., the gear, the armored vehicles and the many guards, just to have dinner somewhere else.
The good news is that much of Iraq, other than Baghdad (outside the Green Zone and other high-security compounds) and a few other places, is returning to normal and is safe, and parts of it, such as the Kurdish region, are actually booming. This means there are increasing potentially profitable private investment opportunities, on a risk- adjusted rate of return basis.
This past week, the Washington-based Center for International Private Enterprise (CIPE) hosted a conference in
Private property is not sufficiently protected, and bureaucratic regulation and interference still smother much productive economic activity. Some of the mistakes the Bush administration made in
Increasing numbers of Iraqis understand their future prosperity lies in developing a vibrant market economy, and they also understand the conditions for such an economy include the rule of law, protection of private property, abolition of price controls, stabilization of money, low tax rates and basing regulations on sound cost-benefit analysis.
The all-too-numerous and unproductive government bureaucrats who feed at the trough of the state oil revenues are selfishly resistant (as they are in other countries) to the needed freeing of the economy.
Ironically, the drop in oil prices maybe a blessing to Iraq, because it will help convince the people they cannot just rely on oil revenues, and, in turn, must create a healthy, broad-based market economy. Given the recent histories of other war-torn countries in Europe and Asia, my bet is that a decade from now
Finally, if my prediction is right and if Iraq does evolve into a "normal" country, much of the credit will be not only to the sacrifices of the men and women of the U.S. military but also the civilians working for the U.S. government and nongovernmental organizations, all living under very unpleasant and dangerous conditions while doing their best to make Iraq a better place.
Eleven days ago, a young Iraqi working on the reconstruction of the hotel volunteered to me he was thankful that Americans had got rid of Saddam and he appreciated what Americans were trying to do for his country. I expect his expressed feelings may be shared more widely in
Richard W. Rahn is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute and chairman of the Institute for Global Economic Growth.
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