Ahmed Shide admits his country is following a development path similar to that of China but not any sort of model.
The youthful Ethiopian state minister of finance and economic
development was speaking from his office in the government buildings
area of central Addis Ababa.
"It is not about copying absolutely the Chinese model, but the
history of how they managed their development process has been
influential, particularly in targeting economic sectors and unleashing
the forces of the market in terms of attracting foreign direct
investment," he says.
The dusty streets of Addis Ababa, one of the highest-altitude cities
in the world, may still look a world away from China's modern cities of
Shanghai and Guangzhou, but China-style policies are much in evidence.
The government has set up special economic zones, including one, the
Eastern Zone, set aside for Chinese companies, to encourage foreign
direct investment and foster industry.
It has also adopted five-year plans to give itself targets for economic development.
The haunting Live Aid images of famine and disease of the mid-1980s are no longer being allowed to define the nation.
"The way China has industrialized and grown their agriculture and the
way they have delivered a government-led process of development has
been something to learn from," Shide says.
As many commentators have observed, not just Ethiopia but other
African countries are now looking eastward rather than to the West for
their economic inspiration.
They have become frustrated by the policy prescriptions for Africa
that have prevailed since the late 1980s. This so-called Washington
Consensus - central to the thinking of the Washington-based institutions
of the World Bank and the IMF - has put pressure on African countries
to look for private-sector solutions to their problems and also initiate
reforms in order to get development assistance.
Chinese loans and major investment in infrastructure in much-needed
roads and bridges have proved to be a breath of fresh air over the last
decade.
And since the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008 and the financial
crisis emanating from the West, there has been a greater interest in the
sort of state capitalism that has featured strongly in Asia's
development.
Martyn Davies, chief executive officer of Frontier Advisory, a
research and strategy-consulting firm based in Cape Town, believes there
has been a real change of mood in Africa.
"We have gone from almost a market fundamentalist position of the
post-1989 Washington Consensus to a more interventionist form of state
capitalism," he says.
"Words like privatization and free-market trade have almost become
dirty words, and you are never likely to hear them at a South African
political forum. The Western financial crisis has been used to justify
this."
Ethiopia was one of six African countries that made it into the top
10 fastest-growing economies in the world over the last decade,
according to research by The Economist magazine using IMF data.
Perceptions of the continent are changing, and some have argued that
the Lions of Africa may give the Asian Tigers a run for their money in
the development stakes of the 21st century.
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