Morocco’s 2026 growth: the rebound will be won beyond agriculture
Behind the headline indicators, investors should focus on the quality of growth: priority sectors, skilled employment, regulatory stability and climate resilience.
In-depth legal, tax and economic briefings for companies from the United States, Canada, France, the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, China and Europe planning to invest or operate in Morocco.
Behind the headline indicators, investors should focus on the quality of growth: priority sectors, skilled employment, regulatory stability and climate resilience.
Moroccan incentives can accelerate a project, but they must be connected to land, permits, local tax and robust contractual governance.
The potential is real, but success will depend less on announcements than on contracts, water, green certification and project bankability.
Morocco’s automotive upgrade will depend on electric mobility, carbon traceability, subcontracting contracts and more strategic components.
For foreign groups, Moroccan tax must be considered from the structuring phase: entity, VAT, withholding tax, transfer pricing and documentation.
Data has become a commercial asset, but also a source of liability for foreign companies operating, outsourcing or exporting services from Morocco.
Acquisitions, distribution networks, exclusivity clauses and tenders in Morocco should now be approached with competition law reflexes.
Moroccan tourism attracts capital, but strong projects secure land, operations, standards, water and service quality.
Water imposes a new discipline on agricultural and agri-industrial projects: measure, secure, save and better monetise every resource.
Financing Moroccan SMEs depends as much on legal and accounting quality as on the appetite of banks or funds.
Nerra Law Firm assists foreign companies with market entry, incorporation, tax structuring, contracts, compliance and local representation in Morocco.