Ethiopia Role of Government
Rug-weaving room at a government-run crafts center in
Addis Ababa.
Courtesy Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations (S. Pierbattistin)
The imperial government presided over what was, even in the
mid-twentieth century, essentially a feudal economy, with
aristocrats and the church owning most arable land and
tenant farmers who paid exorbitant rents making up the
majority of the nation's agriculturalists. Acting primarily
through the Ministry of Finance, the emperor used fiscal and
monetary strategies to direct the local economy. The various
ministries, although not always effective, played a key role
in developing and implementing programs. The government
conducted negotiations with the ministries to allocate
resources for plan priorities.
Officials formulated actual operations, however, without
adhering to plan priorities. This problem developed partly
because the relationship between the Planning Commission,
responsible for formulating national objectives and
priorities, and the Ministry of Finance, responsible for
resource planning and management, was not clearly defined.
The Ministry of Finance often played a pivotal role, whereas
the Planning Commission was relegated to a minor role. Often
the Planning Commission was perceived as merely another
bureaucratic layer. The ultimate power to approve budgets
and programs rested with the emperor, although the Council
of Ministers had the opportunity to review plans.
After the revolution, the government's role in determining
economic policies changed dramatically. In January and
February l975, the government nationalized or took partial
control of more than l00 companies, banks and other
financial institutions, and insurance companies. In March
l975, the regime nationalized rural land and granted
peasants "possessing rights" to parcels of land not to
exceed ten hectares per grantee. In December l975, the
government issued Proclamation No. 76, which established a
500,000 birr ceiling on private investment and urged
Ethiopians to invest in enterprises larger than cottage
industries. This policy changed in mid-1989, when the
government implemented three special decrees to encourage
the development of small-scale industries, the participation
of nongovernmental bodies in the hotel industry, and the
establishment of joint ventures.
Under the Provisional Military Administrative Council
(PMAC; also known as the
Derg
--see Glossary), Ethiopia's
political system and economic structure changed
dramatically, and the government embraced a Marxist-Leninist
political philosophy. Planning became more ambitious and
more pervasive, penetrating all regions and all sectors of
the society, in contrast to the imperial period. Article ll
of the l987 constitution legitimized these changes by
declaring that "the State shall guide the economic and
social activities of the country through a central plan."
The Office of the National Council for Central Planning
(ONCCP), which replaced the Planning Commission and which
was chaired by Mengistu as head of state, served as the
supreme policy-making body and had the power and
responsibility to prepare the directives, strategies, and
procedures for short- and long-range plans. The ONCCP played
a pivotal role in mediating budget requests between other
ministries and the Ministry of Finance. The government also
sought to improve Ethiopia's economic performance by
expanding the number of state-owned enterprises and
encouraging barter and countertrade practices (see
Industry and Energy;
Foreign Trade, this ch.).
On March 5, 1990, President Mengistu delivered a speech to
the Workers' Party of Ethiopia (WPE) Central Committee in
which he declared the failure of the Marxist economic system
imposed by the military regime after the 1974 overthrow of
Emperor Haile Selassie. He also announced the adoption of a
new strategy for the country's future progress and
development. Mengistu's proposals included decentralization
in planning and a free-market, mixed economy in which the
private and public sectors would play complementary roles.
The new strategy would permit Ethiopian and foreign private
individuals to invest in foreign and domestic trade,
industry, construction, mining, and agriculture and in the
country's development in general. Although Mengistu's new
economic policy attracted considerable attention, many
economists were skeptical about Ethiopia's ability to bring
about a quick radical transformation of its economic
policies. In any case, the plan proved irrelevant in view of
the deteriorating political and military situation that led
to the fall of the regime in 1991.
Data as of 1991
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