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Ethiopia Economic Update, November 2012 : Overcoming Inflation, Raising Competitiveness

Authors :
Geiger, Michael
Goh, Chorching
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
World Bank, Washington, DC, 2012.

Abstract

Since 2004 (Ethiopian Fiscal Year (EFY) 1997), Ethiopia has experienced strong and generally broad-based real economic growth of around 10.6 percent on average between then and 2011. Growth over the last nine years was far beyond the growth rates recorded in aggregate terms for Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), which on average only reached 5.2 percent, less than half of Ethiopia's average real gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate during that period. Inspired by the East Asian experiences for a comparison of selected indicators and policies of Ethiopia and China/Korea), growth was induced through a mix of factors including agricultural modernization, the development of new export sectors, strong global commodity demand, and government-led development investments. The initial double digits growth rates have now manifested slightly lower but remain at high single-digit levels. The economy is expected to stabilize at around seven to eight percent in 2012, largely owing to improved performance in the agriculture sector. GDP growth is likely to stay around that margin up until 2016 (EFY 2008) driven by rising foreign investment and exports (Economist Intelligence Unit 2012). High inflation persists, but is on a slightly decreasing trend. Economic growth brought with it positive trends in reducing poverty, in both urban and rural areas. Ethiopia follows a strategy of increasing exports to facilitate growth. This is appropriate given the currently limited size of its domestic market and it is consistent with the development experience of some of the recently successful countries, particularly in East Asia. Export of goods growth is to a good extent driven by volume growth across a variety of product groups, which indicates that this growth is a result of recent efforts to increase and diversify the export base. Overall export and import developments result in a significantly increased trade deficit by 43 percent, up from US$5.5 billion in 2010/11 to US$7.9 billion.

Subjects

Subjects :
PRICE LEVELS
REAL INCOME
VALUE ADDED
EXTREME POVERTY
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
WORLD TRADE
FOOD PRICE
INFLATIONARY PRESSURES
GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION
NOMINAL INTEREST RATE
INFLATION
NOMINAL ANCHOR
FISCAL BALANCE
RESERVE MONEY
CONSUMER PRICES
FISCAL DEFICIT
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPROPRIATION
BROAD MONEY
REGIONAL INFLATION
SHORTFALL
SERVICES MARKET
INCOME
INPUT PRICES
NATIONAL FINANCES
REAL INTEREST RATE
IMPORT
COMPETITIVENESS
PERSONAL INCOME
WORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
RETURNS
DEBT SERVICE
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
CREDIT GROWTH
PER CAPITA INCOME
MARKET ENVIRONMENT
CAPITAL INCOME
RATE OF GROWTH
HIGH INFLATION
DOMESTIC SAVINGS
AVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY
CONSUMPTION BASKETS
PRICE INFLATION
PURCHASING POWER
PROPERTY RIGHTS
DEVALUATION
ECONOMIC SITUATION
INCOME INEQUALITY
ELASTICITY
MONETARY POLICY
INDUSTRIALIZATION
SLOWDOWN
LIQUIDITY
PRICE INCREASE
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
POVERTY REDUCTION
PUBLIC DEBT
LEVELS OF EXPORTS
PRIVATE SAVINGS
CAPITAL REQUIREMENT
ANNUAL GROWTH
CONSUMER PRICE INFLATION
FIXED CAPITAL
CURRENCY DEVALUATION
FINANCING REQUIREMENTS
PRICE OF GOOD
CONSUMERS
MARKET PRICES
RETAIL PRICES
SURPLUS
WTO
GDP
PRIVATE PROPERTY
TRADE BALANCE
DISTORTIONS
FINANCIAL PRESSURE
INVESTMENT ACTIVITIES
PRICE INDICES
TAXATION
EXPORT DIVERSIFICATION
INCOME TAX
EXPORTS
EXTERNAL TRADE
POSITIVE EFFECTS
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE
FISCAL POLICY
CENTRAL BANK POLICY
EXCHANGE RATE
INVESTMENT DECISIONS
MARKET FORCES
CURRENCY
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
INVESTMENT RATE
CAPITAL GOODS
BALANCE OF PAYMENT
DEBT FINANCING
FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
REAL GDP
EFFECTIVE EXCHANGE RATE
INVESTMENT PATTERNS
MONETARY TRANSMISSION
ECONOMIC SIZE
GLOBALIZATION
INCOME GROUPS
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
MARKET INTEGRATION
INVESTMENT LEVELS
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
IMBALANCE
INCOME GROWTH
RELATIVE PRICE
BUDGETING
FINANCIAL HEALTH
INFLATION EXPECTATIONS
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
LEVERAGE
TOTAL RESERVES
TRANSACTION
BANK POLICY
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
MONETARY CONDITIONS
TAX
FOREIGN INVESTORS
BANKING SYSTEM
ECONOMIC GROWTH
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
DEPRECIATION
TRANSACTION COSTS
PRICE DYNAMICS
DOMESTIC MARKET
POPULATION GROWTH
PROPERTY RIGHTS PROTECTION
SUBSTITUTION
INFLATION RATE
PRODUCTION COSTS
COMMON MARKET
RESERVES
ASSETS
GINI COEFFICIENT
PRODUCER PRICES
CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS
TAX COLLECTION
TOTAL EXPORT
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
LIVING STANDARDS
CAPITAL INVESTMENT
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
TAX REFORM
REAL EFFECTIVE EXCHANGE RATE
TOTAL IMPORT
TRADE DEFICIT
WAGES
EXTERNAL DEBT
GOLD
LABOR MARKET
LOW-INCOME COUNTRY
NATIONAL ECONOMY
REAL INTEREST
GDP PER CAPITA
DEBT
ECONOMIC EXPANSION
DURABLE
NATIONAL INVESTMENT
FREE TRADE AGREEMENT
MARKETING
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
CENTRAL BANK
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE
RESERVE REQUIREMENT
AGRICULTURE
NATIONAL BANK
PRICE CHANGE
FREE TRADE
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INFLATION TARGET
TARIFF INCREASES
DEFICITS
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
PRIVATE BANKS
RETAIL PRICE
COMMERCIAL BANK
GLOBAL TRADE
REAL INTEREST RATES
RESERVE
HUMAN CAPITAL
PRIVATE INVESTORS
INSURANCE
SAVINGS RATE
CENTRAL BANK BILLS
CURRENT ACCOUNT
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
CEREAL PRICE
PRICE VOLATILITY
MARKETIZATION
GROWTH RATE
ADVERSE SHOCK
CORE INFLATION
RESERVE ACCUMULATION
MONETARY FUND
CONSUMPTION GROWTH
GOVERNMENT DEFICIT
DOMESTIC CONSUMPTION
NATIONAL SAVING
CASH FLOWS
LABOR FORCE
SAVINGS
RETAIL
CONSUMER GOODS
EXPERIENCE OF COUNTRIES
EXPENDITURE

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2456..3e1eec881703d468183fb39093120a6b