Setting the stage: growth and convergence in Ethiopia

Patrick McSharry, Konstantin Wacker, Gabriela Schmidt, Mike Nyawo, Samuel Mulugeta, Frehiwot Worku Kebede, Miguel Sanchez Martin*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterProfessional

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Abstract

Ethiopia’s rapid growth over the past two decades has resulted in a surge in income per capita levels, with the country approaching fast the middle-income milestone. Over the past decade, fast growth was driven by capital accumulation, but the extent to which this growth has been equally distributed is unclear. Public infrastructure spending accelerated dramatically in the first half of the 2010s, helping underpin fast economic growth. However, this approach seems to have had important shortcomings. Contrary to the findings of World Bank (2015) which examined an earlier period, total factor productivity (TFP) declined during 2011-2020, contributing negatively to growth. In addition, inequality at the household level increased between 2011 and 2016. Finally, macroeconomic imbalances have widened, a trend exacerbated by recent shocks. This report discusses the drivers of growth in Ethiopia and, in the absence of official subnational gross domestic product (GDP) figures, examines whether there has been convergence in economic activity at the subnational level.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationEthiopia’s Great Transition
Subtitle of host publicationThe Next Mile - Country Economic Memorandum
Place of PublicationWashington D.C.
PublisherThe World Bank
Chapter1
Pages10-25
Number of pages16
Publication statusPublished - 6-Jul-2022

Publication series

NameCountry Economic Memorandum
NumberAUS0002952

Keywords

  • Ethiopia
  • Growth
  • Development
  • Policy

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