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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, April 20, 2015
Why it’s time for East Africa’s big success story to change the way it does business.

Just over 30 years ago, Ethiopia’s famine regularly made the news.
Gruesome accounts of up to a million deaths stemming from drought and
civil war captured the attention of aid agencies, sympathetic
governments, and humanitarian groups around the world. Contrast that
with the past decade, when Ethiopia averaged an economic growth rate of slightly better than 10 percent. The about-face has been so dramatic that some seasoned observers have gone so far as to call Ethiopia’s progress an economic miracle, dubbing the country an “African lion” whose success recalls that of Asia’s economic tigers.
Encouraged by its accomplishments, the governing Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) continues to focus on a high-growth strategy aimed at making Ethiopia a middle-income country by
2025. To the casual observer, this goal appears increasingly within
reach. Ethiopia is not just growing, but has already met or is coming
close to meeting some of its important Millennium Development Goals, including universal primary education and reductions in infant mortality. The country’s poverty rate fellfrom 44 percent in 2000 to 30 percent in 2011. Unemployment rates, though still high, have been coming down. And the number of Ethiopianmillionaires has increased faster than in any other African country.
But these successes have come at a price. The government’s obsession
with meeting high growth targets at any cost has resulted in widespread
popular anger and discontent, much of it along regional and ethnic lines. The Ethiopian government claims its practice of cheaply leasing out large tracts of land to major agribusinesses after resettling or displacing the local population are necessary to sustain economic growth. Instead, these “land grabs” have led only to disappointing output levels, human rights violations, and abuses of power. As a result, despite the economic boom, if the EPRDF claims victory in the upcoming May 25 national and regional elections, it will be due only to its repressive political tactics: harassment of the opposition, harsh crackdowns on protests, and jailing of critical journalists in record numbers.
This is all part of the plan.Ethiopia’s late prime ministerMeles Zenawi believed, as did Singapore’s Lee Kuan Yew, that a measure of prosperity was essential before democracy could take root. As a result, since Zenawi rose to power in 1995, Ethiopia has followed an “authoritarian developmentalism”
model, prioritizing state-directed economic growth over human rights or
genuine political pluralism. But while this “development before
democracy” strategy has paid off until recently, it is unlikely this
success can be sustained for much longer. Even assuming the government
can repress mounting ethnic and regional unrest, the country’s limited
financial capacity poses another serious impediment to continued growth.
Ethiopia’s public investments in infrastructure, state enterprises, and
human capital amount to 19 percent of GDP — the third-highest rate
in the world — and are outrunning the country’s financial capacity.
As a result, the government’s hope of achieving its ambitious
development goals depends on its willingness to scale back its control
of the economy and letting the private sector fill the gap. This will
require democratic reforms.
Some selective governance and economic reforms have already begun. Corruption, as reported by
the World Bank, has fallen sharply in recent years, with Ethiopia now
earning the highest ranking in East Africa. Additionally, because the
public sector plays such a key role in the economy, the government
instituted civil service reforms, making Ethiopia second only to Kenya among East African countries in its World Bank ranking of government effectiveness.
Unfortunately, progress in other areas has been underwhelming. The
EPRDF’s history of bullying has had such a chilling effect on democracy
that the opposition currently
holds just one seat in Ethiopia’s 175 seat House of Peoples’
Representatives. It’s no surprise that the country ranks dead last in
World Bank measures of voice and accountability, political stability,
and absence of violence. Since 2005, Ethiopia has also experienced an
almost continuous decline in Heritage House’s measure of economic freedom, placing it last in the region.
While the EPRDF continues to insist that its work has just begun and
notes that the Asian developmental states needed decades to deliver on
their socioeconomic and macroeconomic goals, it now faces major funding
roadblocks. Revenue shortfalls have already forced the government to
finance some of its more ambitious projects through international loans
from China, India, and the World Bank. Another financing option has been
through direct central bank financing and forcing private banks to
purchase Treasury bills at a discounted interest rate. Resorting to
domestic funding has only exacerbated inflationary pressures, with
inflation reaching 40 percent at one point in August 2011.
An IMF report highlights the trade-offs involved in Ethiopia’s financing
dilemma. Although inflation has subsided to the single digits,
excessive borrowing from the financial system to fund capital
expenditures could quickly cause it to ramp up again. Because inflation
hits low-income ethnic groups and regions especially hard, this would
almost certainly cause the current social discontent to erupt into
uncontrollable turmoil. The alternative is external borrowing, which
might ease inflationary pressures but at the cost of significant
increases in the country’s debt burden. By IMF calculations, to stay
within safe limits of domestic credit and external debt, Ethiopia will
have to scale down its growth targets to more achievable levels.
Slower growth may, in fact, be a blessing in disguise. The experiences
of other countries that have attempted sustained high rates of growth
suggest that such approaches create increasingly harmful side effects.
Shortly before his death, Meles Zenawi received some
sage advice from Gao Xiqing of the China Investment Forum. “Do not
necessarily do what we did,” Gao cautioned him, adding that policies
pursuing “sheer economic growth” in China had saddled the country with
massive pollution and inequality.“You have a clean sheet of paper here,”
Gao advised. “Try to write something beautiful.”
Unfortunately, even slower growth may be a moot point. Ethiopia’s
state-led development model is ultimately unsustainable if the
government lacks the capacity to maintain the required rates of public
investment. The only realistic alternative is to scale back state
control of the economy, enabling the private sector to drive further
growth. To be viable, however, the private sector will need secure
property rights, impartial third-party contract enforcement, increased
economic freedom, and quality public education — all the cornerstones of
democracy.
Should the EPRDF prove unwilling to relinquish control and enact the
necessary reforms, economic growth will almost certainly slow
significantly, taking with it any prospect of a viable, functional
democracy. Instead, Ethiopia would almost inevitably default to the type
of “transitional democracy” found all too often in Africa. Neither
fully democratic nor fully authoritarian, Ethiopia would join the likes
of Burundi, Cote d’Ivoire, Uganda, and Zimbabwe in embracing the outward
trappings of democracy, while overlooking inconvenient details, such as
control of corruption and free and fair elections.
EPRDF officials have repeatedly stated that
democracy, like development, is an existential matter for Ethiopia and
that the party is equally committed to both. The time has come to put
this philosophy into practice. Ethiopia’s state-led development model
has run its course and now faces diminishing returns. Many of the abuses
associated with that model are galvanizing large segments of the
population against the government, and it will not have the resources to
overcome this resistance. At this point, growth can only be sustained
if the government allows and encourages a transition to a more dynamic
model driven by the private sector. If the government can accomplish
this, then both prosperity and democracy have a chance in Ethiopia.
ZACHARIAS ABUBEKER/AFP/Getty Images

