jeudi 31 juillet 2008

Morocco / International Monetary Fund (IMF) / Statement

Morocco / International Monetary Fund (IMF) Statement by IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn at the Conclusion of his Visit to Morocco




RABAT, Morocco, July 31, 2008/African Press Organization (APO)/ — Mr. Dominique Strauss-Kahn, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), issued the following statement in Rabat on July 30, 2008, at the end of the first day of his visit to Morocco:
“I am very pleased to have the opportunity to undertake my first visit to Morocco as Managing Director of the IMF. I congratulate the government of His Majesty King Mohammed VI on Morocco’s strong economic gains in recent years, which have made it a pillar of development in the region. I also indicated that our Executive Board, representing 185 countries, last week praised Morocco’s performance in its annual review of the Moroccan economy in the context of the 2008 Article IV consultation.
“During our discussions, we agreed on the need to sustain the momentum of reform, including by increasing Morocco’s openness to the global economy, in order to raise living standards and create jobs. Similar to many other emerging market countries, Morocco currently faces the challenge of surging food and fuel prices, which has significantly impacted the trade balance and the budget. Over the medium term, reducing the subsidy burden, particularly through a better targeting toward the poor, will be essential. This will also create room to boost spending on investment and social spending, and help further reduce public debt.
“I also congratulated Bank Al-Maghrib for its effective management of monetary policy. Going forward, international developments will make it harder to control inflation, and I am reassured that the central bank stands ready to adjust monetary policy if inflationary pressures intensify.
“The financial sector is sound and robust to shocks, and I welcome ongoing efforts to strengthen sector supervision in view of the rapid credit growth, notably in real estate. Morocco’s increasing integration in the global economy is also welcome. I indicated that the Fund will continue to support Morocco’s ongoing reform efforts through policy advice and technical assistance.”


SOURCE : International Monetary Fund (IMF)

mercredi 9 juillet 2008

Hurry Up To Morocco ' Or it'll be too Late

MOROCCO. The VIPs arrived long ago, including Sting, Mick Jagger, Princess Alexandra, David Bowie, Vanessa Branson, Alain Delon. Many occupy luxurious palaces around Marrakech. The tradition of Western interest goes back to Winston Churchill’s famous patronage of Marrakech’s beautiful Mamounia Hotel.
Yet Morocco preserves an exotic and historic charm lost in many other Arab countries, plus a warm, dry, healthy climate, and a beautiful landscape, with its markets and traditional architecture, its car-free medinas and palaces hiding breathtaking gardens.
Morocco is now going mass-market. The coasts are a major destination for French tourists and increasingly for retirees. There is a whole associated infrastructure of guest houses, French-speaking newspapers and doctors, and an increasing number of French settlers.
Morocco’s economy has been doing quite well. King Mohammed, who succeeded in 1999, is a dynamic monarch who has brought substantial reform to Morocco, and some national reconciliation. Unemployment fell in 2006 to 15.5% in towns (9.7% nationally), down from 18.4% in 2005 (11% nationally).
However national GDP is only expected to grow by 2.5% in 2007, according to the Finance Ministry, due to a poor harvest. This follows a spectacular economic performance in 2006, when GDP grew by 8%. Nevertheless indicators suggest an economy which is steaming ahead, with electricity consumption up 22.9% on the year to March, industrial equipment imports up 12.7%. This is combined with an inflation rate of a mere 2.7%.
In 2007, a study published by the Georgetown University-based Center for Strategic and International Studies called 'Arab Reform and Foreign Aid: Lessons from Morocco' concluded that Morocco provides a valuable lesson in political and economic reform. It showed that top-down reforms can be highly effective, if skilfully and determinedly carried out, and that aid donors should lean towards countries where evidence of such commitment is to be found.
Morocco received US$3 billion in foreign direct investments in 2007, mostly from the Gulf, according to reports in the leading newspaper Aujourdhui.
The forthcoming mass tourism explosionA massive tourism and residential development programme 'Vision 2010' - of which the coastal section has come to be known as ‘Plan Azur’ - was launched six years ago to bring 10 million visitors a year to Morocco by 2010 and build 250,000 hotel beds, including 180,000 located in or around the cities. There will be 1,300 weekly flights into Morocco, with 15,6 million passengers per year. Many large international hotel chains have already built developments, including Club Med, Liwa, Accor, and Sol Melia. Tourism almost invariably brings increased interest in buying in the country, and will likely have an enormous impact both on Morocco’s economy, and on property prices.
Six huge new tourist stations / residential developments in priority coastal resorts are at the heart of Plan Azur, including: Saidia (Oujda), Lixus (Larache), Mazagan (El Jadida), Mogador (Essaouira), Taghazout (Agadir) and Plage Blanche (Guelmim).
Saidia is being developed by Fadesa and will have 30,000 beds and three 18-hole golf courses, the first unit opened in 2007. Lixus is being shared between three developers and will have 12,000 beds, and two golf courses; the first unit opens in 2009. Mazagan is being developed by Resort Co, and it will have 3,700 beds, opening in 2009.Mogador is being developed by three developers, will have 6,800 beds, and open in 2009 Taghazout is being developed by Taghazout resort and will have 18,000 beds, and open in 2009 Plage Blanche seems likely to be built by Fadesa, will have 19,500 beds and open in 2012.
Outside the mass marketThe long Moroccan real estate boom, of course predates the mass market, and concentrates on the ‘authentic’ Morocco, and above all on giving Westerners a stylish life in exotic, traditional surroundings..
At the core of this has been the craze for buying Riads. It is not unusual to see Riads – traditionally-shaped Moroccan houses, with grand salons giving onto a central tiled courtyard, often with a garden at the centre - offered on the Internet for €500,000 or in the case of the most palatial, €1,000,000. Around 7,500-15,000 French residents live around Marrakech in these and other accommodations.
Will Morocco run out of Riads? Well there are 50,000 Riads in Marraketch and only 1,000 are sold to foreigners. The coasts are also a major destination for French and other European tourists and those looking for a second home. After the boom caused by the French, “the English market is beginning,” says Charles El Fassy of the real estate agent Cabinet Charles El Fassy.
“We have had five years of French buyers. We thought: “Things cannot go on like this any more!” says El Fassy. “But they are going on. It is beginning all over again, with the British.” Prices have increased threefold in four years, he says.
Morocco’s climate makes it a perfect destination all year round. It is hard to imagine, but it is possible to ski in Morocco, and mountain trecking is very popular.
The attraction centres of MoroccoThe cultural and physical attractions of Morocco centre on its traditional cities - Marrakech, Fes, Meknes, Casablanca, and Essaouira - and on its one coastal resort, Agadir.
Marrakech is an extraordinarily exotic city, with its drama heightened by a location at the foot of the Atlas Mountains. It is expecting 3.5 million tourists by 2010. Marrakech has a complete tourism zone, Aguedal. A public transport system carries tourists from the district into the city centre for its souks and traditional markets selling copperware, wool merchandise, and carpets and kaftans. There are no less than 27 5-star hotels in Marrakech.
In Casablanca the French built a city in a French idiom, heavily influenced by the architecture of the Arab-Andalusian Empire. The city centre has a modernist grandeur, with plenty of space and light. Casabablanca is large, modern, and agreeable, with five golf courses less that an hour away.
Meknes was recognized as a World Heritage Site in 1996. Its physical location, on a plateau, made it Morocco’s trade crossroads. Its magnificent architecture was built by the 17th century Ruler, Sultan Moulay Ismail. Over 55 years he built palaces, mosques, gardens, and lakes. At his death the unfinished buildings including the royal palace - the Versailles of Morocco - which fills most of the old city.
Agadir is Morocco’s main seaside destination. Beautiful beaches, luxurious hotels, an ultra-modern airport are all combined with a moderate climate. Agadir’s beach is spectacular. Some 10 kilometres in length, it is clean and wide. Agadir enjoys a continuous breeze from the Atlantic, so that the temperature is pleasant all day.
Tangier has a louche reputation dating from the 1920s, when it was an outpost for British paederasts. Then in the 1950s, beats, dropouts and writers like Burroughs and Bowles, Ginsberg and Kerouac, Leary and Eldridge Cleaver came to Tangier. It is a messy, rather ugly city. Now its coastline is being covered with resorts and new developments.
Essaouira is popular with independent travelers. This is partly because of its long beach, and partly because of its laid-back atmosphere. Yhe town has long been magnet for Moroccan poets and creative talent. In the Place de L’Indépendence, which is the main square in the centre of Essaouira, there are dozens of cafés and restaurants. It is a pleasant place to eat, drink, and watch the world go by.
Some make the analogy with Turkey. Morocco appeals to European tourists, holiday-makers and retirees for much the same reasons as Turkey. Like Turkey, but arguably more so, Morocco has large qualities of well-preserved architectural history. It has charm, exoticism, and a historical built environment which elsewhere in the Arab world has been largely obliterated by modern buildings. And it has geographical variety, the Atlas mountains, and wonderful beaches.
It is difficult not to suspect that Morocco’s success in attracting both summering and settling Europeans will eventually outpace that of Turkey.
source : www.bi-me.com

mardi 8 juillet 2008

Reinsalu’s Morocco project villas and apartments for sale


Uus Maa Real Estate Company announced that in July they started the sales of the real estate in the resort Le Jardin de Fleur, which was established with the partnership of Margus Reinsalu and titled to be the best development in Arabic countries.


Le Jardin de Fleur with its 700 ha of land covers 6 km of beach and consists of 11 resort centres with large villas, terraced houses and apartments, writes aripaev.ee.
According to Marge Ambos, the foreign real estate advisor of Uus Maa, it’s a good investment opportunity, as the complex has been designed for rent. Strategic location, construction quality, as well as a position in a developing market all speaks for the project.
The grand development project, with more than EUR billion invested in it, is part of Morocco’s king Mohammad VI’s tourism promotion plan Vision 2010. The strategy includes 5 other resort areas at the Atlantic Ocean besides Le Jardin de Fleur, and with an EUR 9 billion investment the number of tourists by 2010 is planned to be increased up by to 10 million people. In 2007, the number of tourists visiting Morocco increased by 13 pct, reaching 7.4 million people.
The development company of the project is the international enterprise Property Logic, the owners of which are Estonian Margus Reinsalu, Englishman Sean Cusack, and Dutch Joop Huisman. One of the partners is also Radisson Hotels & Resorts.