By Dr. Seid Hassan
June 16, 2008 — Many Ethiopians,
especially those in the Diaspora community have been and
still are puzzled by two contradictory phenomena
regarding the Ethiopian economy. On the one hand, the
ruling party, the EPDRF, has been reporting
record-breaking growth rates of the Ethiopian economy,
year-after-year. Year after year, we have been informed
that the state of the Ethiopian economy was on a higher
growth trajectory, “thanks to the policies of the ruling
government.” As of this writing, a rosy forecast is
provided by the government for both this year (2008) and
the next one, while at the same time, the United Nations
humanitarian agencies such as UNICEF are reporting, as
did the Voice of America on its June 6th broadcast, that
“Ethiopia Faces Worsening Food Shortage…” Nearly a month
ago, the prime minster, Mr. Meles Zenawi told the
parliamentarians the rampant inflation rate that has
engulfed the country was due to the “empowered” peasants
asking for higher prices for their produce and due to a
growing economy.
On the other hand, Ethiopians, including
those of the members of the Diaspora experience
increased squalor, disease, unemployment (known to be
way over 50% in urban areas), hopelessness, unnecessary
deaths, chronic poverty, these same filth and misery and
chronic poverty increasing over time. Every time the
members of the Diaspora visit their country of origin,
they observe that the people they used to know and their
own families are growing into abject poverty. Most
importantly, they read Ethiopia being listed at the
bottom of the world country rankings. They read, among
other things, Ethiopia being one of the poorest and
highly indebted nations in the world. They know that the
country’s human poverty index is ranked as 98 out of 102
countries, and its human development index is 169 out of
177 countries, and so on. The rosy forecasts and actual
growth rates were given to us while, at the same time,
the CIA World Fact Book states, on a yearly basis, that
“Ethiopia’s poverty-stricken economy is based on
agriculture, which accounts for half of GDP, 60% of
exports, and 80% of total employment. The agricultural
sector suffers from frequent drought and poor
cultivation practices…” They also hear the existence of
perennial food deficits and watch on worldwide TV
networks pictures of starving Ethiopians. They hear,
read, and watch video clips of their fellow Ethiopians
being swept away by the currents of the Indian Ocean
while trying to flee poverty and dictatorship. They also
hear their compatriots being massacred by religious
extremists. They read and hear on the news that their
country men and women languish in the jails of
neighboring countries after escaping the unbearable
hardships within their own country. They know that their
sisters are being abused by their modern slave masters
in the neighboring countries, some speculating the human
trafficking masterminded by the TPLF members. Nowadays,
it is not uncommon to hear Ethiopian women, who are
abused by both the modern slave owners and their jealous
wives. For some of them, when the abuse becomes
unbearable, some of the abused Ethiopian women have been
reported to have lost their minds and become totally
crazy. In some situations, the modern slaves are
reported to have killed the wives of their modern slave
owners . It has also been reported that, no matter the
psychological circumstances of the Ethiopian women, the
courts have ruled against them.
Because of these contradictory
phenomena, they thought there was (is) something very
wrong in the definition and usage of economic growth and
development! For those of you who have not thought about
this issue, do you think that the above contradictory
scenarios can take place at the same time? Which of the
above phenomenon do you think is correct: the forecasts
and growth rates provided by the government over many
years, or the facts on the ground? Just to help you make
your own conclusion, there is a heuristic tool (concept)
known as the Rule of 72 or the Rule of 70 when dealing
with growth rates. What this rule says is that, if you
divide the growth rate of an economy for a given period
into 72 or70, the number that you come up with will be
the number of years it would take for an economy to
double itself. For example, the Ethiopian government
estimates that the Ethiopian economy will grow by 10.8%
for the year of 2008. Assuming that this growth rate
stays the same, it would take only about 6.67 years or
less for the Ethiopian economy to double itself.
Admittedly, this is one of the highest forecasts that
the Ethiopian government has given to us, but even if
the growth rate is less than the one mentioned above,
the Ethiopian economy must be, on per capita basis,
several times over what it was 18 years ago!
This and a few other forthcoming
articles are designed to dispel and demystify the
“myth”, if there is any at all. God willing, I intend to
show that, using the next successive articles, there is
nothing wrong neither about the concepts of economic
growth and development nor about differences between the
two. In so doing, I will rely on basic economic theory,
empirical evidence and the facts on the ground while at
the same time being non-technical (I hope). In this
article, I will briefly list and explain the well-known
ingredients (determinants) of economic development, all
of them to be expounded later in a step-by-step fashion.
Even though I do understand some of my readers could be
left on suspension while waiting for the next article,
my experience has strongly indicated to me that the
readership increases when the specific article is
shorter than would be otherwise. My readers also need to
recognize that it takes time to write each article.
a) Economic Growth
Versus Economic Development
For those of you who have been paying
attention as I have, you should have observed that the
Ethiopian government spokespersons, on many occasions
and using different forums, mixing up the concepts of
economic growth and economic development as if they
are the same things. What is worse is that the EPDRF’s
cadres have been using what is known as the “bounce back
effect” from hard times of the economy as if the same
effect is (was) going to be sustainable for a long time
to come. As we all know an agrarian economy such as
Ethiopia’s always faces both good and bad harvest times.
For example, one reasonably can expect that the drought
affected areas to enjoy good harvest yields sooner or
later. Such “bounce back effects” which begins from a
low level, will have a significant and positive effect
on the growth rate of the economy for that year.
Unfortunately, the author of this article has observed,
on many occasions, the government’s spokespersons
talking as if the good harvests are permanent while in
fact they are not. As recently as a month ago, the
writer observed a few of the government agents
commenting-using the government supported pal-talk show-
on the unusually high coffee export earnings. They
indicated that this was due to the good policies of the
government and Ethiopians have to be proud of this fact.
The same spokespersons were in fact mentioning the total
dollar amount of exports in nominal terms (that
is, without adjusting for inflation). As one of my two
good friends who looked at this article before it was
published correctly reminded me, Ethiopia’s earnings
from coffee exports are no different from those in the
60s in real terms. Moreover, the same
commentators did not know, unfortunately, that
economists know that a prominent feature of agricultural
commodity exports in many developing countries is that
relatively few commodities account for a large share of
total export earnings. For example, over 60% of
Ethiopia’s foreign exchange reserves come from exporting
coffee. The fact of the matter is that unstable coffee
prices and export earnings have made the country’s
development planning difficult. I wish the same
commentators knew, assuming that there is no malice
intent, dependence on production of primary commodities,
such as on coffee, can be expected to have a declining
share in world trade unless they have a major cost or
quality advantage over competitors.
Going back to the distinctions between
growth and development, itt is really important to
distinguish between these two concepts. Using just their
dictionary meanings, to grow means to increase in size
or number while to develop means to increase one’s
ability and desire to satisfy one’s own needs and
legitimate desires and those of others. In the parlance
of economics, too, the two concepts are significantly
different from each other, even though they are by no
means mutually exclusive. In general, economic
development may be attained by improving both the
quantity and quality of the factors of production
(land, labor, capital and entrepreneurship) that a
country has available. The performance of these factors
of production hugely depends on the policies of any
government. A country such as Ethiopia, which has no
strategic resources and is incapable of benefiting from
innovation and technological breakthroughs, the growth
of the economy solely depends on the policies it designs
and executes in managing its limited factors of
production. The government also needs to consider
allowing and encouraging citizens to be full
participants in the decision process. Unfortunately, not
only the ruling party was incapable of managing the
limited resources of the country but its policies also
have had (and still have) deleterious effects on the
economy and the people. I will show this to be the case
in the next few essays.
Moreover, one of the notorious
characteristics of agrarian economies and those which
depend on commodity exports is fluctuation in their
growth rates. For example, the Ethiopian economy was
reported to experience a negative growth rate in 2003.
From such a low level, the Ethiopian economy, as
expected, experienced a “bounce back effect” the
following year. Such fluctuations are known to have
deleterious effects since the bring uncertainty to
economic participants, especially investors and
consumers. This being the logical and empirical fact, it
is quite incredible for the government agents to use the
“bounce back effects” as if the Ethiopian economy is
growing yea- after- year .
Now, numerically speaking, economic
growth is an increase in real gross domestic product
(GDP) (that is, GDP adjusted for inflation). Basically,
it amounts to adding all the NEWLY created goods and
services and comparing the resultants to their
counterparts created a year ago. For example, to see
whether the Ethiopian economy has increased in 2008
(compared to 2007), one would calculate it as:
Growth rate of GDP2008 = [GDP2008 –
GDP2007 ]/ GDP2007 × 100. Again, this GDP growth rate
can be calculated in real terms (adjusting for
inflation) or nominal terms (by not taking inflation
into account) . It can also be measured in per capita
terms (after dividing real GDP by the total population).
Obviously, as Ato Teshome A., who posted an article on
Aiga Forum in response to my inflation article admitted,
the problem with Ethiopian economy is that its economic
growth rate is unable to cope with that of the growth
rate of the population (labor force). The implication is
that, as time goes by, each citizen is poorer than
before. It is also important to note that, first, GDP
calculation and its growth rates require estimation
since only God knows how many goods and services a
country produces every year. This is true even in the
case of the well-developed economies, where the informal
sector of the economy is minimal and where there is a
constant flow of information- a good portion of it
automatically and electronically - about the economy.
Imagine how difficult it could be to calculate the
growth rate of an agrarian Ethiopian economy where the
informal sector is 40.3% (according to UNCTAD).
Moreover, since 85% of the Ethiopian population lives in
the countryside and depends on subsistence farming, and
since the agricultural sector of the economy accounts
for nearly 49% of the economy, it is very difficult to
come up with an acceptable number and percentage growth
rate. In countries like Ethiopia, most of the
information gathering will have to depend on humans
(party cadres). And who knows how the same cadres
collect and report the information! Incidentally, when
one of the parliamentarians questioned the statistics
given by the government and tried to inform the prime
minister that that entire he could see was increased
poverty; the prime minister angrily responded that the
numbers that the government reports were not cooked up
at the bars (mesheta bet). The prime minister told him
that the same numbers could also be found in the books
of the IMF and the World Bank. It is important to remind
the reader, however, that nearly all of the figures that
the IMF, the World Bank, and other foreign based
agencies use and report are the same ones provided by
any government in the world, including Ethiopia. By the
way, have anyone of you met any employees of the IMF and
the World Bank at the villages such as in Borena,
gathering information how may quintals of teff, corn,
etc. that each peasant has produced, and how many
cattle, ship, etc. that each peasant has raised? If you
have not, you should come to the conclusion that the
numbers that these multilateral agencies use must be
collected by the government’s agents.
Second, there are several problems in
using GDP growth rate to measure general well-being,
whether it is measured in real per capita terms or not.
Some of the problems are: a) it fails to tell us the
components of goods and services produced. For example,
a huge growth of GDP is totally useless for any average
citizen if this growth rate is attained via an increased
military activity due to a war. b) It does not provide
any information relevant to the distribution of income
in a country. It is quite possible that an economy can
grow by leaving a huge segment of the population behind.
Some writers have commented this to be the case
regarding Ethiopia. c) It includes negative
expenditures, such as repairing polluted water supplies
or building prisons. A portion of the increase may also
be attained by polluting the rivers and air. If this is
the case, the amount of growth may be overstated once we
take the environmental damage into account. d) It also
fails to tell us the quality of goods and services
produced. Economists are well aware of these
deficiencies in GDP growth. It should only be viewed
merely as an indicator and not an absolute scale. That
is why most experts and multilateral, such as the United
Nations, use other measures such as the Human
Development Index (HDI).
Economic development, on the
other hand, reflects the quality of life, which includes
efforts that seek to improve the economic well-being and
quality of life for ALL citizens of a country, not just
the few and the well-connected. It looks at, among other
things, whether the growth in GDP allows those who want
to attain improved education and health care access to
them. It should allow a country not only to improve its
stocks of physical and human capital and technology but
the same improved resources and technology must also
allow it to do other more subjective factors that
contribute to human life, such as leisure, safety,
cultural resources, social life, mental health, and
political freedom etc. Amartya Sen, the 1998 economics
Nobel Prize winner defines economic development in terms
of personal freedom, freedom to choose from a range of
options. Professor Sen and other development experts
argue that while economic growth may lead to an increase
in the purchasing power of people, if the country has a
repressed economy, there is a lack of choice and hence
personal freedom is restricted. Hence, once again,
growth has taken place without any development. That is
why multilateral organizations such as the United
Nations us other means to evaluate the economic
performance of a country. Such broad measures include,
but are not limited to: The Physical Quality of Life
Index, Human Development Index, Human Poverty Index and
the Human Suffering Index. As of this writing Ethiopia’s
Human Development Index is 2.4 out of 10 which puts her
169 out of 177 for the years of 2007-2008. I would like
to invite the reader to look into Part C below regarding
Ethiopia’s position in international ranking.
b) Long Term
Determinants of economic development
A number of empirical findings conducted
by many development experts, including those who work at
the World Bank and the IMF, indicate that, the following
factors play prominent roles in determining the growth
and development of an economy. In short, any policy of
any country which lacks the following did not and is
not expected to grow and develop. These are:
1. Good quality if
human capital attained with the provision of good
education: Nobel Prize Winner, T.W. Schultz had
a long time emphasized the need for "human capital"
formation. Other prominent economists such as W. Arthur
Lewis and Hans Singer extended Schultz’s thesis by
arguing that social development as a whole - notably
education, health, fertility, etc. - by improving human
capital, were also necessary pre-requisites for growth.
The same literature has led to the problem of the "brain
drain" that was (and still is) flowing from the
developing world to the developed world. As we all know,
Ethiopia is suffering not only from a lack of educated
people but the government’s policies have been behind
the hemorrhaging of the country brain when it forces its
educated people to leave the country. To add insult to
injury, the prime minister told us that he was intending
to import educated people from countries such as
Nigeria. Common sense would indicate to anyone that it
easier to keep and attract the thousands of the
country’s expatriates instead of trying to borrow
foreigners.
2. Availability and
access to good health care: Empirical findings
have indicated that, among other things, a country’s
health care expenditures are highly correlated with a)
productivity; b) good jobs; c) innovation; d)
entrepreneurship; and e) business competitiveness. Many
experts, including Todaro and Smith, also believe that,
education and health go hand-in-hand and are highly
complementary.
3. Technological
breakthroughs and the ability of a country to adopt and
use new technology: This is mainly true for
developed economies, but given that Ethiopia, as a
developing country would be unable to enjoy from this
effects, the growth and development of its economy
depends on the policies that are designed to use its
scarce resources and its use of residual technology
created elsewhere.
4. Lack of ethnic
fractionalization and lack of ethnic conflict:
In recent years, cross-country studies have shown that
ethno-linguistic fractionalization, the very method that
the EPDRF uses as a divide-and-rule tactic, is
detrimental to long-term economic growth. As we speak,
this author is working on the possibilities and links
between ethno-linguistic fractionalization and,
rent-seeking behavior and corruption.
5. Access to the
sea: Cross-country studies have shown that
land-locked countries are poorer than those enjoying
access to the sea. Empirical evidence has also has
confirmed the hypothesis that landlocked countries
experience slower economic growth.
6. Favorable
geography and location (climate) – being away from the
tropics: Overall, countries which are located
in the tropics may be predisposed to slower growth in
part due to diseases such as malaria.
7. Low level of
corruption and capacity for collective actions, such as
political pluralism and participation (governance and
rule of law) : Even though Ethiopia’s standing
on corruption is abominable, this author and many others
of Ethiopian origin believe that the corruption scourge
in Ethiopia is so repugnant that it has changed the
culture of the country. Were it not for the propaganda
machine of the government and the millions of dollars
spent on lobbying, the country’s corruption index would
have been much higher (worse).
8. High Degree of
Openness to trade and investment, including foreign
direct investment: Overall, countries open to
international trade and investments grow faster than
those which are not. Openness, among other things,
enhances learning-by-doing, competitiveness and
efficiency.
9. A free market
economy which allows the free flow of resources,
domestic trade and entrepreneurship: Even
though external trade is much more important to smaller
economies such as Ethiopia than larger economies, it is
important to note that the exchange and free flow of
goods, services and resources within the country is much
higher and important than external trade. Just ask
yourself, how many people are allowed to establish their
own businesses and run them so smoothly in the highly
controlled state of Tigrai?
10. Stable
Macroeconomic policy. These include stable
prices (inflation in Ethiopia is a whopping 30% or more
in 2008!); lower budget deficits (with $740 million
deficit for 2007, nearly 40% of the government budget
being financed by foreign assistance, and 54.5% debt/GDP
ratio for 2007); and manageable and lower trade deficits
(Ethiopia’s trade deficit is $1.851 billion (2007 EST.).
The so called “stellar growth” that the TPLF has been
talking about could be attributable mostly to
unprecedented infusions of foreign exchange in the last
few years. For example, preliminary estimates indicate
that the TPLF led government gets the following amount
from outside sources: 1. Official development assistance
$2.0 billion/year 2. From Non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) $1.2 billion/year 3. Immigrant remittances $1.1
billion/year 4. Unofficial payment from the war on
terror ($80 million/month x 12) $960 million with a
total of flow of assets from overseas $5.26 billion.
There regime also has collected proceeds from auctioning
of urban land in the amount of $200 million and got some
proceeds from party-owned businesses such as textile,
cement, transportation, etc. in the amount of $180
million. If there is any growth at all, it comes from
the service and construction sectors, most of the funds
coming from foreign assistance and expatriates . The
author of this short article believes that, were not for
these constant infusions of foreign assistance and
reserves, the country should have faced a financial
crisis by now.
11. Secured formal
institutions, such as a well-functioning legal
system, protection of property rights, tax and financial
system and independent media. As everyone knows,
repressive regimes abuse the legal system, overtax their
citizens and fear independent media. Since these are
loaded concepts, we will come back to them later.
12. Low level of
income discrepancy between the rich and the poor,
between males and females and between the urban and
rural areas with a constant effort to reduce poverty.
Many studies have shown that development is also a
social and economic phenomenon such as eliminating
poverty, unemployment and inequality
You be the judge here! Do you believe
the Ethiopian government has given their due attention
to these determinants of economic development in the
last 18 years? If you have your own doubts, I don’t
blame you. What we observe in Ethiopia today and in the
last many years is increased abject poverty.
We will come back to each of the above
determinants of economic growth and expound them as
applied to Ethiopia in the near future. I use this
opportunity to invite anyone to collaborate with me in
the coming essays. If I and/or my collaborators feel
that the issues are either already explored by some
other authors, I (we) will either summarize them for you
and/or refer you to those articles and/or books
c.) Here Ethiopia’s
positions in some of the international rankings . Again,
you be the judge!
1. Population: over 81.2 million with a
growth rate of between 2.3% (government report) or 2.9%
(UNICEF) per year;
2. GDP per capita: $118 for 2006/7 – an
IMF estimate; $149 – as reported by Economist
Intelligence Unit); $180 - as reported by UNICEF.
3. Population living below the national
poverty line = 44.2%;
4. Population below $1/day = 23%;
5. Percent of the population below the
poverty line of under $2 = 81%
6. Life expectancy at birth - 47.8
years. Many experts believe the actual is figure is
close to 40 years.
7. Corruption Perception Index-(2.4 –
ranked as 138th (compared 130th out of 163 (2006));
8. People living with HIV/AIDS about 1.7
million with a annual death rate of about 120,000 (2003
estimate);
9. # of people living under food
deficits every year = 26 million;
10. Overall of doing business ranked =
102nd (down from 99th in 2007);
11. Ease of starting business: ranked
106th (compared to 103rd in 2007);
12. Protecting entrepreneurs ranked
107th (compared to 105th in 2007);
13. Ease of getting credit ranked as
97th (compared to 94th in 2007);
14. Level of deforestation and soil
erosion, etc. Ranked as one of the worst in the world;
15. Ethiopia faces: deforestation
overgrazing; soil erosion desertification water
shortages in some areas from water-intensive farming and
poor management;
16. Infant Mortality Rate (one of the
worst in the world):
Total:
90.24 deaths/1,000 live births
male:
99.72 deaths/1,000 live births
female:
80.47 deaths/1,000 live births (2008 EST.)
Some UNICEF statistics: 1. % of
population using adequate sanitation facilities, 2004,
urban = 44
2. % of population using adequate
sanitation facilities, 2004, rural =7
3. Estimated number of people (all ages)
living with HIV, 2005 (thousands), high estimate = 1300
(that is 1.3 million) 4. Prevention among young people:
% who have comprehensive knowledge of HIV, 2000-2006*:
male =33
5. Prevention among young people: % who
have comprehensive knowledge of HIV, 2000-2006*: female
=21
6. Prevention among young people: % who
used condom at last high-risk sex, 2000-2006*: male = 50
7. Prevention among young people: % who
used condom at last high-risk sex, 2000-2006*: female =
28
8. Orphans Children (aged 0-17),
orphaned due to all causes, 2005, estimate (thousands) =
4800 (that is 4.8 million)!
9. Orphan school attendance ratio,
2000-2006* = 60
10. Undernourished people = 46%
Human trafficking and modern day slavery
Ethiopia is a major country of origin for trafficking in
persons. To a lesser extent, it is also a country of
transit. The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has
listed Ethiopia as one of the top 10 countries of origin
for children trafficked from Africa. Every year,
thousands of women and girls are trafficked from
Ethiopia to the Middle East, specifically in Lebanon,
Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates. One estimate
states that as many as 1,000 Ethiopian girls are
trafficked to Beirut, Lebanon each month. Documented
routes for the purpose of sexual trafficking lead also
from Ethiopia to Bahrain, the United Kingdom, and
Canada. It is also reported that Ethiopian women have
been trafficked to Mongolia and forced to work there as
nude dancers. Ethiopia may be a transit country for
women trafficked from Burundi to Lebanon as well.
Internal trafficking has also been reported in Ethiopia.
For example, children have been trafficked from Gamo
Gofa Zone, Southern Ethiopia People’s State, to Addis
Ababa for labor.
The writer is the Editor
of the Journal of Business and Public Affairs and
Professor of Economics, Department of Economics and
Finance, Murray State University. He can be reached at
seid.hassan@murraystate.edu