Radar | Dec 07,2019
Mar 20 , 2021
By Christian Tesfaye
It is no secret. Consumers are devastated. The rise in the cost of living has pushed the goalpost further; many have been pulled below the poverty line. The unabated rise in the price of goods and services has understandably frustrated people. The lucky ones worry about how long they would have to delay plans to build a family, move to a better location or start or expand a business. The less fortunate worry whether the next paycheck would be enough to put food on the table for the next month.
Policies that result in increasing the cost of living – such as depreciating the Birr or cutting subsidies from basic commodities such as fuel – can seem inhumane. In my conversations with people, few things make them as emotional as the suggestion that, indeed, the Birr is still overvalued and that electricity and fuel subsidies are too high to be sustainable in the long term. I do not blame them, especially if they have a fixed income.
The whole idea that the public should endure short-term pain for the promise of sustainable economic development in the long term is hard to swallow for many. It is an issue complicated further by mistrust between the public and the authorities. But with a government that has discipline in its spending and borrowing habits, liberalisation is indeed the appropriate and long overdue booster to what is an otherwise ailing economy.
Let us present a simple illustration with shoes. About a year ago, men’s leather shoes from a modest shop in downtown Bole would cost somewhere around 3,000 Br. Almost all of them carry shoes made in Italy, Pakistan or Turkey. Today, their prices hover around 4,000 Br as a result of the depreciation of the Birr. Dollars are exchanged for Birr somewhere along the supply chain, probably by someone who travels to Dubai or, increasingly, Turkey.
This is a waste of national resources in more ways than foreign currency being moved out of the country. It is not news that Ethiopia has the highest livestock population in all of Africa. This means that the raw material - animal hides - is already present in abundance for a thriving leather and garment industry. Some 20 million livestock are slaughtered annually in Ethiopia, although only a fraction of the hides meet quality requirements to add value to the industry. Nonetheless, the resource is there for the taking.
The other ingredient is the human capital with the desire, innovative spirit and know-how to tap into this resource. This is present as well, even if the incentives are few and far apart. Take the modest bazaars and fairs that pop up around town, such as a recent one at the Addis Abeba Golf Club in the Lideta District. Artisans showcase Ethiopian-made handcrafted leather products that are, on average, much cheaper. A pair of leather shoes, for instance, could be found for a price that is half of what an imported pair would cost.
No doubt, these are not Italian shoes. But neither are they cheap products that are offensive to the eye and get worn down weeks after being bought. Many of these leather products are well-designed, comfortable and produced with care. They are indeed a good bang for one’s buck.
But this thriving industry, more than tax cuts and a smooth value chain, requires demand to grow. It cannot as long as consumers spend money on products produced overseas by multi-million dollar companies that do not need our business. The local ones do. Much of their consumer base are the few expats eager to take something "exotic" back home, but the more demand they have from locals, the more they could grow their business.
It means more jobs and value addition, fewer imports and better profits for these businesses to attract a skilled workforce and innovate further. In time, Made in Ethiopia could sound as fashionable as Made in Italy when it comes to leather products. Adjusting the value of the Birr is an essential ingredient in this. It could translate into a rise in the cost of living. But if it is measured – without having to resort to instruments of shock therapy – and integrated with greater discipline in spending and borrowing by the government, it is the right instrument to shake the country out of its current economic lethargy.
PUBLISHED ON
Mar 20,2021 [ VOL
21 , NO
1090]
Radar | Dec 07,2019
Radar | Jul 18,2020
Commentaries | Sep 16,2023
Fortune News | May 09,2020
Radar | Aug 05,2023
Radar | Oct 19,2019
Viewpoints | Apr 10,2026
Advertorials | Aug 26,2025
Fortune News | Oct 12,2019
Life Matters | Jun 13,2026
Photo Gallery | 190414 Views | May 06,2019
Photo Gallery | 180159 Views | Apr 26,2019
Photo Gallery | 176828 Views | Oct 06,2021
My Opinion | 142550 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...
Jun 27 , 2026
The federal legislative house rushed through one of the country's most contentious ho...
When Parliament takes up the appropriation bill, federal legislators will receive a d...
Jun 13 , 2026
The recent policy decision to fully open freight forwarding to foreign capital may be...
Jun 6 , 2026
For a political veteran as controversial as Getachew Reda, last week's national elect...
Jun 27 , 2026 . By BEZAWIT HULUAGER
A year after federal transport authorities restricted fossil-fuelled vehicles to clea...
Jun 27 , 2026 . By BEZAWIT HULUAGER
Ethiopia is selling more to the rest of Africa than ever before. The trouble is that...
Jun 27 , 2026 . By NAHOM AYELE
For thousands of Addis Abeba homeowners, a house they paid for years ago may still no...
Jun 27 , 2026 . By NAHOM AYELE
Shareholders and senior managers of Key Housing Finance Solutions Plc are turning on...