IMF Omits Ethiopia in Growth Forecast

Oct 16 , 2021


[ssba-buttons]

The IMF has omitted Ethiopia in its latest GDP growth forecast, citing uncertainty. This is the first time the organisation has failed to include the country in the report it publishes biannually. Last year, the IMF initially projected the Ethiopian economy would not exhibit any growth before amending the figure to two percent. "For Ethiopia, projections for 2022–26 are omitted due to an unusually high degree of uncertainty," reads the World Economic Outlook document published last week. Experts caution the missing projection could further tarnish investors' outlook on the country. Neighbouring Kenya is expected to maintain an average GDP growth of close to six percent over the coming four years


Radar

Ethiopia, IFAD Sign 69.2m Dollar Deal to Promote Lowland Resilience

The Ethiopian Government and the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) have signed a 69.2 million dollar grant agreement to implement Phase II of the Lowland Livelihoods Resilience Project (LLRP II). The grant agreement was signed by Finance Minister Ahmed Shide and IFAD President Alvaro Lario. The project targets climate resilience and improved livelihoods for three million people in pastoral and agro-pastoral communities. Co-financed by the World Bank, LLRP II covers eight reg...


Radar

NBE Expands Diaspora Warning Over Unlicensed Remittance Firms

The National Bank of Ethiopia (NBE) has issued an expanded public warning targeting unlicensed remittance operators abroad, flagging four U.S.-based companies it says are undermining Ethiopia's financial regulations. The warning includes newly disclosed findings and specific cases that underscore growing concerns about illicit cross-border financial activity. Remittance flows remain a vital lifeline for Ethiopia's economy, supporting households and supplying critical foreign currency. But as...


Radar

Stricter Standards Unveiled for Public Auditors, Accounting Firms

The Accounting & Auditing Board of Ethiopia (AABE) has issued a new directive aimed at strengthening oversight and professional standards in the accounting and auditing sector. Grounded in the Financial Reporting Proclamation, the directive addresses long-standing regulatory gaps while preparing the sector for the country's emerging capital market. Key provisions introduce stricter licensing standards for public auditors, professionals permitted to audit public interest entities. Applican...