Opinion depot

Showing posts with label Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Africa. Show all posts

Who owns change?

Ethiopian early birrImage via WikipediaBy Tadesse Tegegn

Summing up the recent developments in the Ethiopian politics, one can say it is a hell of events that carried a bundle of messages about which way the country is heading. It seems like a turn of a greatly deserving chapter whose subsequent pages tend to be heavily laden with yet another revolutionary tide that may change the course that we have been accustomed in the last 20 years.

If we look at the root causes of the current economic shortfalls, you may well agree it may have started with the sudden currency devaluation the Ethiopian ruling party passed. The measure may have stunned many, but the consequence of not doing so, may also be  hard to imagine. Many may have been expecting some form of  devaluation, but not at the magnitude of a whole 17% in one day. In many advanced countries this kind of grandiose move can only be a recipe for disaster. But in Ethiopia it has proven to be possible. For how long? It is yet to be seen. The turn of events since then, however have been gradually encroaching to connect all the emerging economic problems to the devaluation of Birr.  It looks like, as a vulnerable group, the poor have been affected the most. First the food prices started climbing, resulting in the concerns of the people pouring into the streets and the media. The government had to take a swift move in fixing this destabilizing trend in its infancy, as the North African revolts, mainly due to the sudden jump of food prices, are giving a good reason to believe they may soon come home. The prices of items were given a ceiling beyond which merchants can’t ask; salaries were raised and commercial wholesalers were held accountable for their greedy attempts to unfairly collect too much profit at the expense of the consumers that have no other alternatives. According to the government spokesperson, the price limit was designed for the suppliers to make no more than 4-6% profit. This may be news you have already known. But have you realized its impact in the country’s politics?  Economists have been predicting the well talked about measure will bring shortages of products and it very well did. In an apparent struggle to counter this trend, the regime has started to import and sell food and other items directly to the consumers, in what looks like we are back to the communist era. It reminds me of a saying about how history can repeat itself. Wait a minute; the regime is not by any means communist; they abandoned it just about 20 years ago.  So where has this policy of government interfering with free trade and long lines of consumers forming in the government supply (rationing?)chains around the country has come from? Oh, how smart, they already said it is a short term measure. Ok; good luck with recruiting a new generation of selfless sellers that go beyond their interests - their country. Hopefully it is not going to take too long; only in Ethiopia. I wouldn’t be surprised, like everything else, if this wild guess also works. At least there is a form of (revolutionary) democracy in Ethiopia.

What else can I say? The whole reason behind this development is the fact that the merchants refused to sell their items with the limited profit the government passed as a “temporary” law. Let’s look at it very closely. First there was a humongous devaluation of the Birr, then, there was the inevitable inflation that was only meant to be a short term phenomenon but brought about its own garbage of the merchants trying to take advantage of it. Then the regime intervened. For how long no one knows?
Now I tried to stop and think. Think about what has been happening in the last week or so. After the prime minister’s Historic speech and introduction of the Nile Dam initiative that will cost about $5B, there has been a feverish epidemic among the population to finance it solely by buying the newly released bonds as investment, savings and contribution to this nationally important project. The government sent its delegations to various European and North American cities to solicit support. I have been observing the unusually dumb character of the so called Diaspora opposition group but never as dumb as this time. Have they lost their mind and civility? Is it self-serving or self defeating? They wanted to storm meetings. They said shame on you, this time without mentioning names. They did everything they could to disrupt the meetings. What they forgot was the importance the Ethiopian people gave for this historic project. It is one thing to protest against the regime. It is quite the opposite to assume the country should stop planning and even functioning unless the current regime yields power, all from the comfort of the western life style. I have never seen such a counter-productive movement.

Then I thought how valuable these people would have been for a healthy opposition, if they could focus on a disciplined and challenging opposition, that would ring the bell for the people to think there is an alternative to all this. And I thought, if Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, as usual, singlehandedly passes an invitation for all to come and participate in the building of the new and inclusive democracy that involves all and for all to contribute by lifting the ban on free speech and the media as a whole and tell them to do everything they have been doing overseas in the home land, will this courageous move pour cold water on their anger filled vengeance? I asked myself what if? And I answered to myself nothing as bad as the current bitterness would be observed, if every ban is lifted overnight. Nothing at all, because change belongs to people and they know very well how to make ends meet, however confusing it may seem. If this sounds like an open letter to the Prime Minister, so be it.

Tiya stelae of Ethiopia

TiyaImage via Wikipedia


  Tiya stelae of Ethiopia

Egypt says "amazed" by Ethiopia's Nile remarks

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Ethiopian PM eyes Chinese, Indian investment boost

Meskal Square, Addis Ababa, EthiopiaImage via Wikipedia

By Barry Malone
ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) - Ethiopia is hoping to attract more investment from Chinese, Indian and Turkish companies as part of efforts to industrialise its largely agriculture-based economy, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said.
Though still one of the world's poorest countries, Ethiopia says it has posted double-digit growth rates for six years in a row making it Africa's fastest growing non-oil producer.
"Our hope is that industry will grow faster than agriculture over the next five years," Meles told Reuters in an interview. "We will maintain an export-led industrialisation strategy. The main approach will be to try to attract investment."
Meles said his government would target Chinese, Indian and Turkish firms who wanted to invest in the country's fledgling textile and leather industries.
"We expect more investment from Turkey," Meles said. "We also expect more investment in the textile sector from Indian companies. In the leather industry, a lot of Chinese companies have shown an interest. Some Europeans, too."
Ethiopia's new five-year plan, unveiled in August, predicts a "base-case" scenario of 11 percent average annual growth and a "high-case scenario" of 14.9 percent growth for the period.
Meles said the economy would grow this year at between the 11 percent predicted by his finance ministry and a more ambitious 15 percent.
Ethiopia is Africa's biggest coffee exporter and the world's fourth largest exporter of sesame. It is also one of Africa's biggest potential markets -- with a population of 80 million -- and most of its people have no telephones or bank accounts.
But Meles stood firm on his long-held position that there would be no liberalisation of telecommunications or banking.
Despite that, the 55-year-old said he hoped talks for Ethiopia to enter the World Trade Organisation, would finish soon: "The negotiations are beginning to pick up momentum now."
The former rebel said foreign reserves, which fell to $850 million earlier in 2009, had recovered on booming exports.
POWER PLANS
He dismissed concerns that a 16.7 percent devaluation of the Ethiopian birr, the fourth since January 2009, could spur inflation. The year-on-year inflation rate hit 10.6 percent in October -- way over the government's target of single figures.
"The impact of the devaluation programme is going to be a one-off affair because the massive devaluation was a one-off affair. So we believe the average yearly inflation rate will be in the range of 6-7 percent this year," Meles said.
Inflation in Ethiopia hit a high of 64.2 percent in July 2008. After that peak, the government halted state borrowing and increased bank reserves to drive down the rate and it had been in single digits this year until after the devaluation.
Meles said that power shedding -- which the government says cost the Ethiopian economy 1.1 percent of gross domestic product last year -- should end when a hydroelectric dam that suffered a tunnel collapse is repaired in three months.
Ethiopia, with ambitions to generate 10,000MW, is building Africa's biggest hydropower dam and Meles said the country could become a power exporter within two years.
"I think by the end of the five-year plan we'll be very significant exporters but we should start exporting in a year or two," he said. "Djibouti will probably the first country to get power supply from Ethiopia."
Meles rejected claims from the opposition and some foreign analysts that his government inflates growth figures to attract investment.
"Our economic growth is evaluated very carefully by the IMF and they have never said that we have cooked the outturn figures," Meles said. "They have accepted them as facts. And cooking figures is a very dangerous thing to do."


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Ethiopia rejects 'biased' EU report on May's elections


Coat of arms of EthiopiaImage via Wikipedia
The Ethiopian government has rejected as biased the findings of a European Union report on May's parliamentary elections.
The EU concluded that the polls failed to meet international standards 
and were marred by serious flaws.
However, the Ethiopian foreign ministry said the EU's election observer mission had itself failed to meet Ethiopian or international standards.
It added that the report was flawed and based on preconceived ideas.
"This report amounts to yet another biased political indictment against the democratization process in Ethiopia and the victimisation of the country," said the ministry in a statement.
It accused the EU of "excessive focus" on the fact that the elections further consolidated the power of the governing EPRDF party.
The ministry says this demonstrated that the mission was "primarily preoccupied with the results of the elections and fate of the ruling party rather than the actual conduct of the elections".
In May, the EPRDF trounced the opposition, with only one opposition MP elected to the 536-seat parliament.
The ministry also accused the EU of succumbing to pressure from the rights group Human Rights Watch (HRW).
Last month, HRW issued a report accusing the government of withholding aid from opposition supporters.
Aid
The EU report was released in Brussels earlier this month after the head of the mission was refused a visa to travel to Addis Ababa.
An African Union observer mission found that the polls broadly reflected the will of the Ethiopian people.
Relations between the EU and Ethiopia soured in the aftermath of 2005 elections when the government accused the then chief observer of siding with the opposition and contributing to violent protests that ensued.
The EU, one of Ethiopia's biggest donors, froze its aid to the country. Normal relations and financial support have since resumed.
The BBC's Uduak Amimo in Addis Ababa says it remains unclear what impact the EU report will have on aid and ties with the Ethiopian government.


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