Stefania Fabrizio is Deputy Unit Chief in the Strategy, Policy, and Review Department of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), chair of the IMF advisory group on gender, and member of the IMF advisory group on inequality.
Previously, she worked in the Fiscal Affairs Department, leading technical assistance missions on public expenditure policy-related issues, and in the European Department as mission chief for Cyprus.
Her research interests include macroeconomics, public finance and fiscal institutions, trade. She has also worked extensively on policy issues related to the distributional implications of macroeconomic policies and reforms and women’s economic empowerment.
Prior to joining the IMF, she was visiting professor at the University of Salamanca, Spain. She holds a PhD in economics from the European University Institute.
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Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (DEWA) was formed on 1 January, 1992, by a decree issued by the late
Sheikh Maktoum bin Rashid Al Maktoum to merge Dubai Electricity Company and Dubai Water Department, which
had been operating independently before then. Both organisations were established by the late Sheikh Rashid
bin Saeed Al Maktoum in 1959. Dubai Government fully supported the Electricity Company and the Water
Department to provide Dubai’s citizens and residents with a continuous and reliable supply of electricity
and water. Since then, DEWA has made considerable achievements, to be ranked as one of the best utilities in
the world. DEWA provides services today to more than 900,000 customers with a happiness rate that reached
95% in 2018.
The UAE, represented by Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (DEWA), has maintained its first global
ranking, for the third consecutive year, with scores of 100% in all Getting Electricity indicators in the
World Bank’s Doing Business 2020 report. The report measures the ease of doing business in 190 economies
around the world. DEWA achieved competitive results in global benchmarking, surpassing the private sector
and major European and American utilities in efficiency and reliability. DEWA raised the efficiency of its
energy production by using the latest technologies and adopting technological innovations, surpassing
European and American utilities, by reducing losses from electricity transmission and distribution networks
to 3.3% compared to 6–7% in the US and Europe. DEWA also achieved the lowest customer minutes lost per year
(CML) in the world of 2.39 CML compared to 15 minutes in Europe and was also able to reduce water network
losses to 6.5% in 2018 compared to 15% in North America, which is one of the best results in the world.