Morocco's financial status has undergone major changes in recent years thanks to better management of the country and its government. Since about 1957, Morocco and the United States have joined together to better care for the Moroccan people. They also worked together to help Morocco's agriculture and plantations achieve better harvests. Due to Morocco's warm climate, many farmers grow citrus plants such as oranges, clementines and even vegetables. Morocco has many major export products, olives, tomatoes and citrus fruits, but, surprisingly, agriculture is not the main source of money or what makes their economy work. Fiber optic wire or insulated wire is their number one manufacturing commodity and exports earning around $2,036,000,000 per year in addition to polyphosphoric acid production of phosphoric acids which brings in around $1,487,000,000. But one of the main disadvantages of all this is the child labor used in agriculture and in the production of these other products. Morocco has reduced the number of working minors, but there are still many out there working instead of going to school and receiving a proper education. But when the country relies on these products to run its economy, there is supply and demand all over the world. Thus, eliminating child labor altogether would reduce their annual income and they would only become poorer due to lack of money. Now Morocco is not quite what it seems, kind of a third world country, there are many major industries particularly in the electronics industry and the automotive assembly industry. There are many qualified people with college degrees and experience working to make the industries they have the best they can be. The impact... in the center of the paper......c.html.Wikipedia. Wikipedia: Wikipedia, 2009. sv "Economy of Morocco". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_Morocco (accessed 14 January 2014). ("Economy of Morocco" 2009)Marcopolis Net., "Why Morocco's textile industry will beat the Asian textile industry", Groupe Jamai vice president talks about the growth of the textile industry, Web, www.Marcopolis.net.PROFILE STATISTICIAN MOROCCO. (Working document), http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/, http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/portal/page/portal/european_neighbourhood_policy/documents/MA.pdf.Fiona Tregenna, “What are the distributional implications of halving poverty in South Africa when growth alone is not enough?”, “What are the distributional implications of halving poverty in South Africa when growth alone is not enough?” , 44, n. 22 (2012): 2577-2596, 10.1080/00036846.2011.566186 (accessed January 15, 2014).
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