Ethiopia’s Parliament passed a bill on Wednesday to open up the
country’s financial sector to an estimated five million of its citizens
who have taken other nationalities, including allowing them to buy
shares in local banks and start lending businesses.
The changes are part of a raft of economic reforms initiated by Premier
Abiy Ahmed when he came to power last year, partly aimed at boosting the
country’s foreign exchange reserves, which had dropped precariously
low.
“The law will enable the Ethiopian born diaspora to take part in the
economic growth of the country,” said Lemlem Hadgo, chair of the
Revenues, Budget and Finance Committee of parliament. “It will also
address the grievances raised over the issue.”
Ethiopia’s banking sector, which is closed to foreign investment and is
still one of the most tightly state-controlled in Africa, is dominated
by the two oldest and most profitable institutions, Awash Bank and
Dashen.
Ethiopians who had emigrated abroad but returned to live in the capital
Addis Ababa welcomed the reforms. “We can finally invest in the
financial sector,” said Addis Alemayehou, a businessman who returned to
Addis years ago but has been restricted in the sectors where he can
invest. “The financial sector is one of the most lucrative and well
managed, it’s a safe investment outside real estate.”
He left Ethiopia in 1980 when he was eight and returned in 2001 holding Canadian citizenship.
Abiy’s government is also opening up other key sectors of the economy to foreign investment.
It plans to offer two telecoms licences to foreign firms, which have
been jostling to start operating in one of the world’s last major closed
telecom markets.
Ethiopia’s population is young and growing rapidly, and the economy has
been expanding at a near double-digit annual rate for more than a
decade.
However, Abiy’s reformist drive has been threatened by simmering ethnic
rivalries that have burst into sporadic acts of violence.
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