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From a war-torn and famine-plagued country at the beginning of the 1990s, Ethiopia is today emerging as one of the fastest-growing economies in Africa. This Oxford Handbook focuses on structural transformation to understand Ethiopia's unique model of development.
The editors of this massive volume on the Ethiopian economy have commendably sought to include as many viewpoints as possible while emphasizing empirical approaches. The book covers the major issues, including macroeconomic policy, the development of the social welfare system, agriculture, and industrial policy.
Auteur
Fantu Cheru is Emeritus Professor of International Relations, American University, Washington DC, USA, and a senior researcher at the African Studies Centre, Leiden University, The Netherlands. Between 1998 and 2001, Prof Cheru was the UN Special Rapporteur on Foreign Debt for the Human Rights Commission in Geneva. He was Associate Senior Fellow at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, Sweden, and the North-South Institute, Ottawa, Canada. From 2007 to 2012, Cheru was Research Director at the Nordic Africa Institute in Uppsala, Sweden. Dr Cheru was a member of UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan's Panel on Mobilizing International Support for the New Partnership for African Development (2005-07) as well as Convener of the Global Economic Agenda Track of the Helsinki Process on Globalization and Democracy, Finland. Dr Cheru has served both as adviser and consultant to many governments and donor institutions and is on the editorial board of several scholarly journals. Christopher Cramer is Professor of the Political Economy of Development at SOAS, University of London. A Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences, he is also Vice-Chair of the Royal African Society and a former Chair of the Centre of African Studies at SOAS, University of London. He chairs the International Scientific Committee of the African Programme on Rethinking Development Economics (APORDE), based at the DTI in South Africa; was the principal investigator on the Fairtrade, Employment and Poverty Reduction in Ethiopia and Uganda research project; has worked in South Africa and Ethiopia on the 'industrialisation of freshness'; and, amongst other publications, wrote the prize-winning Civil War is Not a Stupid Thing: Accounting for Violence in Developing Countries. He has undertaken commissions for the World Bank, UNCTAD, ILO, EU, SIDA, DfID, and other agencies, and has worked with policy officials in Ethiopia, South Africa, and Mozambique. Arkebe Oqubay is a Senior Minister and Special Adviser to the Ethiopian Prime Minister and has been at the centre of policymaking for over 25 years. He is a former Mayor of Addis Ababa and Minister of Works and Urban Development. He currently serves as board chair of several leading public organisations and international advisory boards. He is a research associate at the Centre of African Studies at SOAS, University of London. His work includes Made in Africa: Industrial Policy in Ethiopia (OUP, 2015); African Economic Development: Evidence, Theory, and Policy (OUP, 2019); and China-Africa and an Economic Transformation (OUP, 2019). He was recognized as one of the 100 most influential Africans of 2016 and a 'leading thinker on Africa's strategic development' by the New African for his work on industrial policies.
Contenu
Part I: Context, Concepts, and History
1: Fantu Cheru, Christopher Cramer, and Arkebe Oqubay: Introduction
2: Shiferaw Bekele: Ethiopia's transition from a traditional to a developing economy (1890s-1960s)
3: Christopher Clapham: Ethiopia's political economy from the imperial period to the present
4: Teferi Abate Adem: Land tenure and land policy in Ethiopia (1950-2000)
5: Kidane Mengisteab: Federalism in Ethiopia's transformation
6: Assefa Fiseha and Fiseha Haftetsion Gebresilassie: The interface between federalism and development in Ethiopia
7: Menberetsehai Tadesse and Belachew M. Fikre: Ethiopia's constitutional framework and legal institutions for development
8: Fantu Cheru and Zinabu S. Rekisa: Ethiopia's 'economic diplomacy' and regional integration
Part II: Economic Development
9: Mekonnen Manyazewal and Admasu Shiferaw: Economic policy and structural transformation in Ethiopia
10: Yohannes Ayalew Birru: Ethiopian financial sector development
11: Mekonnen Manyazewal: Financing Ethiopia's development
12: Seid Nuru Ali: Infrastructure and economic transformation in Ethiopia
13: Ken Coutts and Christina Laskaridis: Financial balances and the development of the Ethiopian economy
14: Berihu Assefa Gebrehiwot: Trade policy in Ethiopia (1991-2016)
15: Christopher Cramer and John Sender: Policy, political economy, and performance in Ethiopia's coffee sector
16: Laura Hammond: Livelihoods and mobility in the border regions of Ethiopia
17: Haileselassie A. Medhin and Alemu Mekonnen: Green and climate-resilient transformation in Ethiopia
18: John Sender: Assessing poverty trends in Ethiopia (1990-2015)
Part III: Social Policy and Development
19: Tassew Woldehanna and Mesele W. Araya: Poverty and inequality in Ethiopia (1995/96-2015/16)
20: Abebe Shimeles: Growth, poverty, and distribution in Ethiopia
21: Assefa Hailemariam: Ethiopia's changing demography
22: Deborah Johnston and Helen Walls: Economic policy and food security in Ethiopia
23: Kalle Hirvonen, Derek Headey, Jenna Golan, and John Hoddinott: Changes in child undernutrition in Ethiopia (2000-2016)
24: John Hoddinott and Alemayehu Seyoum Taffesse: Social protection in Ethiopia
25: Zinabu Samaro Rekiso: Education and economic development in Ethiopia (1991-2017)
Part IV: Agriculture and Rural Transformation
26: Stefan Dercon and Douglas Gollin: Agriculture's changing role in Ethiopia's economic transformation
27: Alemayehu Seyoum Taffesse: The transformation of smallholder crop production in Ethiopia (1994-2016)
28: Guush Berhane and Kibrom A. Abay: Rural finance and smallholder farming in Ethiopia
29: Florian T. Schäfer, Tadesse Kuma Workako, and Bart Minten: Performance and institutions of the Ethiopian coffee sector
30: Florian T. Schäfer: Private coffee plantations in Ethiopia
31: Ayelech Tiruwha Melese: Constraints on the Ethiopian Floriculture Industry
32: Bart Minten, Seneshaw Tamru, and Thomas Reardon: Agricultural markets in Ethiopia
33: Fantu Nisrane Bachewe and Fanaye Tadesse: Livestock production in Ethiopia
34: Likimyelesh Nigussie and Annet A. Mulema: Women's empowerment in rural Ethiopia
Part V: Industrialization and Urban Development
35: Arkebe Oqubay: Industrial policy and late industrialisation in Ethiopia
36: Arkebe Oqubay: Structure and performance of the Ethiopian manufacturing sector
37: Admasu Shiferaw and Måns Söderbom: The Ethiopian manufacturing sector: Productivity, export, and competitiveness
38: Carlos Oya: Building an industrial workforce in Ethiopia
39: Mulu Gebreeyesus: The private sector in Ethiopia's transformation
40: Lindsay Whitfield and Cornelia Staritz: Light manufacturing in Ethiopia: The apparel export industry
41: Tesfachew Taffere: Technological learning and industrialisation in Ethiopia
42: Won L. Kidane: The legal framework for the protection of foreign direct investment in Ethiopia
43: Tadele Ferede and Belay File: Rural-urban linkages in Ethiopia
44: Tegegne Gebre-Egziabher and Edlam Abera Yemeru: Urbanisation and industrial development in Ethiopia
Part VI: Structural Transformation and the African Continent
45: Justin Yifu Lin, Jiajun Xu, an…