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Mozambique’s debt remains in distress, which is unchanged from the previous DSA published in June 2019. Consideringthat, to a large extent, future borrowingand governmentguarantees reflect state participation in the sizable liquified natural gas (LNG) development, debt is deemed sustainable in a forward-looking sense. Participation in the recently announced G20 initiative would provide debt service relief in the near term, thus flattening the projected sharp deterioration in debt liquidity...
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This is the ninth report reconciling payments made by companies operating in the extractive industry and receipts from the State. 97% of tax revenues from the extractive industry were reconciled. The differences between the payments by the companies and the receipts from the State correspond to 0,17% of the amounts confirmed by the State in 2019
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After becoming an independent State, Mozambique was plagued by a long and severe civil war, which ultimately resulted in an economic collapse led by the lack of investment, nationalization of privately owned industries, as well as widespread food shortage. The 1992 peace agreement marked the transition from civil war to peace, culminating in the country’s first democratic elections of 1994 and the emergence of the Front for the Liberation of Mozambique (Frelimo) as the dominant political...
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Mozambique’s gas can be used to promote industrialisation and rural development, but only if key choices are made now. Current priorities are for export based mega-projects promising high revenues, but like past mega-projects doing little to create jobs or reduce poverty. Mega-projects costing tens of billions of dollars are essential, but the Council of Ministers can instruct that negotiations give a higher priority to using the gas to create a domestic industry and jobs, even if it reduces short term income.
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This working paper examines the limitations of international and national law to address displacement and dispossession from land grabs within the case study of Mozambique. The main question that I seek to answer is: What limits international and national law in addressing displacement and dispossession due to land grabs in Mozambique? I will argue that the limits of law to address displacement and dispossession are not due to a lack of institutionalising international good governance norms...
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This case study has been produced in response to a request made to the Evidence on Demand Helpdesk. The objective of the request was to provide a detailed case study on the evolution of land policy in Mozambique and provide the reader with insights into what is viewed as one of Africa’s most progressive land laws, recognising multiple forms of tenure. Mozambique has experienced accelerated rates of growth over the past decade, averaging 7.2% per year, with projected growth rates of over 8%....
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Themes / Temas
- FDI - foreign direct investment / IDE - investimento directo estrangeiro
- Development Banks / Bancos de Desenvolvimento (1)
- Economic Development / Desenvolvimento Económico (1)
- Extractive Industries / Indústrias Extractivas (3)
- Governance / Governação (2)
- Law / Direito (1)
- Rural Development / Desenvolvimento Rural (1)
Sectors / Setores
Geography / Geografia
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Mozambique / Moçambique
(6)
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North / Norte
(4)
- Cabo Delgado (1)
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North / Norte
(4)
Language / Linguagem
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Between 2000 and 2025
(6)
- Between 2010 and 2019 (5)
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Between 2020 and 2025
(1)
- 2020 (1)