
Viewpoints | Nov 23,2019
Mar 6 , 2021
By Christian Tesfaye
There is much talk about Ethiopia’s future in the digital arena. Like most initiatives taken in this country, the fear is that it is an enterprise that started with enthusiasm but will end anti-climatically without much to show for it.
But there may be inertia that plays to the advantage of the emerging tech scene, and this is the youth’s absolute infatuation with it. It is leading to innovations and entrepreneurial ideas that, although yet to pay off in terms of national productivity, exhibits potential.
Take sites such as TIKVAH, for instance, a news site that has become ubiquitous on Telegram. With well over a million followers, it reaches people from across the country with current affairs news. It does highlight reports that have been published or broadcast elsewhere, but it also has a network of ears on the ground that it calls the “TIKVAHfamily.” It aggregates and triangulates reports from this network of people – wherever there is a reliable internet service – and publishes surprisingly fresh stores from across the country.
Its reliance on what amounts to grassroots journalism, ability to triangulate reports to meet the demands of accuracy, and its ease of accessibility signals the future of news media. Such innovativeness would have barely been imaginable just a few years back.
It is not just TIKVAH. Take ride-sharing apps. In Addis Abeba, especially in the centre of town, it barely takes a minute to book a cab. The number of ride-sharing companies has multiplied over the past couple of years, bringing a diversity of products and services and empowered consumers. The market has evolved so fast, it threatens to wipe out the livelihoods of owners of the traditional blue taxi cabs.
These are just some of the few success stories. There are many at the grassroots level attempting to innovate and break ground in the emerging digital services market. The opportunities are plenty, especially if there is continuity of policy.
The Council of Ministers last year endorsed a 2025 Digital Transformation Strategy. Usually, such aims are not followed through. There is no meaningful political commitment behind it, or implementation is carried out poorly, with little foresight and imagination. Here, though, things could be different.
A telecommunications services regulation was passed through two years ago to streamline a more open telecoms industry. A new authority – the Ethiopian Communications Authority – has been established as a regulatory body. These should be commendable efforts to show that policymakers do intend to walk their talk.
Still, a major reform that can help the digital services economy grow is the liberalisation of the telecoms industry. There should not be much attention attached to Ethio telecom’s privatisation. No doubt, it can fetch foreign currency, improve the country’s standing in foreign currency reserve. But the benefits to the industry will only aggregate once there is competition, through liberalisation.
Ethiopia is in the process of selling licenses for two telecom providers. It will make the country one of the last countries in Africa to relinquish the stranglehold of state monopoly over telecom services. If banking, brewery, and ride-sharing industries have had any lessons, competition means more affordable and diverse products and services.
But this potential could be undercut if there is a lack of policy consistency. The government has already baulked at the scale of liberalisation, especially in barring independent cell tower companies from investing in Ethiopia. This calls into question the government's long-term plans and how much of its strategies and action plans agreed upon on paper the authorities are willing to see through on the ground.
It is not always that a new industry that revolutionalises the way we live, work, consume and spend comes to the fore. There is already a major lag by the standards of even neighbouring countries such as Kenya. There should be a commitment not to fall behind any longer.
PUBLISHED ON
Mar 06,2021 [ VOL
21 , NO
1088]
Viewpoints | Nov 23,2019
Radar | Oct 15,2022
View From Arada | Jul 31,2021
Radar | Oct 27,2024
Advertorials | Mar 06,2023
Sponsored Contents | May 03,2022
Radar | Sep 07,2025
Fortune News | Jan 05,2019
Radar | Apr 30,2024
Commentaries | Sep 07,2019
Photo Gallery | 169803 Views | May 06,2019
Photo Gallery | 160049 Views | Apr 26,2019
Photo Gallery | 149636 Views | Oct 06,2021
My Opinion | 136210 Views | Aug 14,2021
Dec 22 , 2024 . By TIZITA SHEWAFERAW
Charged with transforming colossal state-owned enterprises into modern and competitiv...
Aug 18 , 2024 . By AKSAH ITALO
Although predictable Yonas Zerihun's job in the ride-hailing service is not immune to...
Jul 28 , 2024 . By TIZITA SHEWAFERAW
Unhabitual, perhaps too many, Samuel Gebreyohannes, 38, used to occasionally enjoy a couple of beers at breakfast. However, he recently swit...
Jul 13 , 2024 . By AKSAH ITALO
Investors who rely on tractors, trucks, and field vehicles for commuting, transporting commodities, and f...
Oct 4 , 2025
Eyob Tekalegn (PhD) had been in the Governor's chair for only weeks when, on Septembe...
Sep 27 , 2025
Four years into an experiment with “shock therapy” in education, the national moo...
Sep 20 , 2025
Getachew Reda's return to the national stage was always going to stir attention. Once...
Sep 13 , 2025
At its launch in Nairobi two years ago, the Africa Climate Summit was billed as the f...
Oct 5 , 2025 . By NAHOM AYELE
In Meqelle, a name long associated with industrial grit and regional pride is undergo...
Oct 5 , 2025 . By BEZAWIT HULUAGER
The federal government is set to roll out a new "motor vehicle circulation tax" in th...
Oct 5 , 2025 . By NAHOM AYELE
The Bank of Abyssinia is wrestling with the loss of a prime plot of land once leased...
Oct 5 , 2025 . By BEZAWIT HULUAGER
The Customs Commission has introduced new tariffs on a wide range of imported goods i...