Moroccan Decentralization – Challenges to Genuine Implementation
The
 Moroccan decentralization initiative bears great promise to achieve 
human development goals that are truly ‘of the people’. As turmoil 
engulfs so much of the MENA region, the Moroccan model stands out as a 
potential means of empowering and engaging citizens in peaceful, 
productive action to shape their futures.  Through decentralization, 
local communities select and carry out to completion projects that will 
deliver the vital benefits   in health, education, business creation and
 other areas of life they deem important. Furthermore, the Moroccan 
design is truly exceptional in that it rallies both national and 
regional level support to implement the determined schemes.
 
I have long been – and remain unabashedly - an admirer and supporter of 
Moroccan decentralization. Perhaps because of this, I am, too, acutely 
aware that the challenge to its realization to national scale may well 
be vast enough to ensure that implementation will be a multi-decades 
undertaking.  I should like to offer some current examples of the gap 
between the theory and the reality, followed by some recommendations as 
to how to overcome the significant barriers remaining in order to 
achieve genuine, functioning and systemic decentralization.
 
Decentralization as a state of mind
Firstly, with regard to Moroccan public administrative culture, the 
habit of many decades of deferring to Morocco’s capital, Rabat, remains 
extremely difficult to overcome, even with the existence of 
decentralized structures. Provincial and regional directors oversee 
human service delivery or the protection of the environment over huge 
areas of the Kingdom.  However, sometimes they cannot bring themselves 
to make an autonomous decision regarding a hectare or two of land, or 
the provision of authorization to expand an existing service within 
their jurisdiction, without asking their agency head in Rabat for 
approval – a clear recipe for dysfunction.
 
For example, the region of Marrakesh has the authority to make a 
decision regarding the expansion of the number of beds in a rural high 
school dormitory. Waiting for the stamp of approval from Rabat may well 
result in beds remaining unfilled for the duration of a full school 
year, while rural youth are turned away.
 
Similar delays in implementation might be avoided by agricultural 
extension centers, which should already have the power (together with 
their regional supervisors) to decide for themselves whether or not to 
build a fruit tree nursery to serve neighboring communities. In the 
north and south of Morocco, protectors of the forest and natural life 
may determine the most appropriate form of community engagement and 
implement it with immediate effect, without having to sit on their hands
 waiting for an answer from Rabat.
 
Decentralization, then, is as much a state of mind as an official 
directive. Even when laws and policies confer decision-making ability on
 regions, provinces and municipalities, it is still down to subnational 
officials to exercise their newly acquired ability.  Otherwise, with 
Rabat still effectively holding sway in the official consciousness, 
precious time passes and opportunities for vital progress remain forlorn
 hopes.
 
Communities and their leaders
Secondly, and in common with other advocates of decentralization, I have
 maintained that power ought to be transferred as close to the people as
 possible, which in Morocco means to the municipal level. The creation 
by municipalities of community development plans based on people’s 
participation is the law of the land and can serve as a vital 
cornerstone to a viable decentralized system. The Kingdom’s most recent 
municipal elections, in September 2015, were framed so as to remind 
voters of the importance of choosing their local leaders in the context 
of decentralization and of the greater grassroots decision-making 
authority thus implied.  As a result, in many municipalities, new and 
young leadership stepped forward; however in others, entrenched powers 
remained.
 
In amongst all of this lies a serious dual concern: to whom – and at 
what speed - is authority being transferred? First-hand experience in 
working closely with local leaders in different parts of the country has
 made me highly sympathetic towards a gradual approach to 
decentralization.
 
Hastily-implemented decentralization may and in places will further 
entrench disappointing local leaders who follow narrow self-interest, 
and display intransigence in their positions while forsaking the long 
term benefit of the many, for the immediate, much smaller benefit of the
 few.
 
Decentralizing power in this context will most likely result in further 
social and economic stratification at the community level and greater 
levels of social control. The cruel truth remains that today, in a large
 number of rural municipalities, not a single girl attends secondary or 
high school.  Right now, even with provision free of charge of 
dormitories and public education, a mere ten percent of children in many
 rural villages and municipalities attend secondary school.
 
In part this is a travesty of parents’ own decision-making.  Adding the 
factor of decentralization, with participatory decision-making 
practices, into a social context whereby those making the choices 
routinely engage in entrenched thinking does too little to produce the 
result intended.
 
Learning by doing
I personally have been moved many times by the deep-seated desire of 
local leaders to implement truly popular, communal participation.  
However, they simply do not know how. What can be done on this level? 
The answer is to ensure the opportunity of learning by doing. Members of
 municipal councils, associations, and cooperatives need to experience 
community-based applications of participatory planning methodology and 
assessments of local needs. There are fine examples of such experiential
 learning taking place in the Kingdom, including in the municipalities 
of Ait Taleb, Boujdour, Ourika, Mohammedia, Tnine Ourika and Toubkal.
 
 
Finance matters
That decentralization and participatory methodology are embedded at many
 levels in key policy documents is in itself immensely commendable. 
Building a decentralized system, then, requires actualizing progressive 
policies and employing experiential learning techniques in order to 
build capacity. 
 
Critically, all of this has to be supported by increased funding, with 
increased ease of access to the financial support available. Currently 
the National Initiative for Human Development, which should be the 
natural vehicle for project finance, remains largely inaccessible to the
 vast majority of people and their local associations owing to its 
challenging proposal format, inconsistent timing of calls for proposals 
and a requirement for local partial funding which is simply impossible 
for the majority of rural groups.
 
True decentralization is a Moroccan national priority for which there is
 a keen sense of urgency, given the accompanying empowerment and human 
development advancement at stake.  However, the funding for projects and
 training here described must be increased in order for the local 
partnerships, procedures, and system of decentralization to emerge.
 
Dr. Yossef Ben-Meir is a sociologist and president of the High Atlas Foundation, a U.S.-Moroccan international development organization.
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