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1 - Ethiopia and the Challenge of Late-Late Development

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 September 2023

Tom Lavers
Affiliation:
University of Manchester

Summary

This chapter lays out the book’s contributions to the literatures on state-led development and authoritarian durability. The book provides a detailed examination of the case of Ethiopia in which the EPRDF regime sought to maintain power through rapid development and the structural transformation of the economy. In particular, rapid development was intended to create mass industrial employment in order to gradually replace access to land as the main tool for mass distribution, and thereby maintain political order. The failings of industrial policy amidst rapid population growth resulted in extreme shortages of land and employment for younger generations, an important factor fuelling the mass anti-government protests that eventually forced regime change. The Ethiopian case therefore suggests that the contemporary global economy and the delayed demographic transition present major challenges to state-led development; and that analyses of authoritarian durability need to consider the dynamic challenges of mass incorporation, as well as elite politics.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 1.1A. GDP per capita and annual growth;

Figure 1

Figure 1.1B. Poverty headcount ratio (US$1.90/day 2011 PPP);

Figure 2

Figure 1.1C. Infrastructure expansion;

Figure 3

Figure 1.1D. Under 5 mortality rate (per 1,000 live births)

Source: author, based on World Bank World Development Indicators, NBE (2017, p. 12), USAID (2019).

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