By CANUTE WASWA
In Summary
- The World Bank forecasts that Ethiopia will be the world’s fastest-growing country in the four years to 2019, at 9.6 per cent a year.
Today I have had two reasons to brush up on my Amharic, the national language of Ethiopia.
The first one is because my wife and I are still on our 10th
anniversary travels. We flew Ethiopian
Airlines (which cost us 65 per cent of the price Kenya Airways was offering us) and it cost us nothing to break the journey in Addis Ababa. But the second reason is because Ethiopia was named as the World’s Best Tourism Destination for 2015.
Airlines (which cost us 65 per cent of the price Kenya Airways was offering us) and it cost us nothing to break the journey in Addis Ababa. But the second reason is because Ethiopia was named as the World’s Best Tourism Destination for 2015.
We are now having two weeks of exploring Ethiopia’s outstanding natural beauty, dramatic landscapes and ancient culture.
Ethiopia has undergone an amazing transformation in my lifetime.
Ethiopia has undergone an amazing transformation in my lifetime.
In 1974, Ethiopia’s Emperor Haile Selassie was
overthrown by a military uprising called the Derg – which means
committee. The Derg was formed by a group of disenchanted military
officials who set out to eliminate widespread government corruption.
This conflict culminated in a civil war called the
Red Terror that lasted from 1977 to 1978. Estimates are unclear but it
is claimed that up to a half a million people were killed during the
conflict.
It was a regime so brutal it charged mothers of
students shot dead for the cost of the bullets. Land and almost every
business was nationalised. Then there was a famine of Biblical
proportions that afflicted millions in 1984.
Today, Ethiopia runs sub-Saharan Africa’s first
light rail system, the Addis Metro. The green trams operate on the
city’s East-West route, while those coloured blue are now shuttling
between north and south, daily from 6am to 10pm.
Even the tickets are colour-coded, depending on the
distance to be travelled and the price. Fares range up to the
equivalent of Sh50, which reflects heavy government subsidies.
The rail tramcars rely on power supplied mainly
from overhead wires, with plans to have a dedicated grid, including four
substations, to supply 160MW of power.
The World Bank forecasts that Ethiopia will be the
world’s fastest-growing country in the four years to 2019, at 9.6 per
cent a year.
The country has built 35 universities for 500,000
students and aims to build the world’s biggest hydropower dam, with a $5
billion (Sh500bn) price tag, which the country believes it can afford.
Landlocked, the nation of coffee growers wants to reach middle-income status by 2025.
I see lots of correlations between what Ethiopia is
doing and what Kenya is trying to do with mega infrastructure projects
like the Thika Superhighway and Standard Gauge Railway.
I only have one concern. True development is not
about economic growth; it is about the constant improvement of the
wellbeing of people, inclusivity through productive investment, the
creation of decent jobs and the fair distribution of benefits without
discrimination.
It is a lesson that was brought home by the Arab Spring.
Despite a good growth track record, the Tunisian
economy had not generated sufficient jobs to employ the growing and
better educated labour force, observed a World Bank document prepared on
December 17, 2010.
On that same day, 26-year-old Mohamed Bouazizi, frustrated
by the lack of a decent job and constant harassment, denial of the right
to work and extortion by government agents, set himself alight sparking
off the Arab Spring that engulfed North Africa and parts of the Middle
East.
Inclusion and participation are essential to
development. The Arab spring was not only about lack of jobs; it was
also about the imbalances in wages in places where economic growth was
high.
An effective development policy must promote human
rights and include sustainable, equitable and inclusive growth, as the
economic, social and human dimensions of development all fit together.
The Ethiopia government won its last election with
100 per cent votes. So far, I’m not hearing much criticism from
Ethiopians. They acknowledge their present and past without much
complaints.
Maybe I’m just being a Kenyan.
Mr Waswa is a management and HR specialist and managing director of Outdoors Africa. waswa@outdoorsafrica.co.ke
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