Agenda | Jul 17,2022
Nov 8 , 2025
By Mikiyas Mulugeta (PhD)
The global gold market has entered uncharted territory. Prices have soared by 26pc in dollar terms since mid-September, surpassing 4,000 dollars an ounce by late October, an unprecedented rally driven less by speculative fever and more by tectonic shifts in the global economic landscape.
This spike reflects a confluence of forces. A weakening US Dollar has lowered the opportunity cost of holding gold. Persistently low real interest rates in advanced economies have bolstered gold's appeal as a store of value. Meanwhile, rising geopolitical tensions, inflation fears, and trade disruptions have prompted central banks and institutional investors to increase their gold holdings, thereby tightening the supply and fueling the price surge.
For countries like Ethiopia, this dramatic move in the gold market can be far more than windfall profits, but a crucial moment for their mining industry.
Ethiopia sits on one of the world’s richest geological formations of the Arabian-Nubian Shield. It is home to large gold deposits, many of which are still untapped. The mining sector, which had long been considered underdeveloped, has experienced a dramatic turnaround last year. According to government figures, gold exports generated over two billion dollars in the first 10 months alone, representing a massive leap from the 274 million dollars recorded the previous year.
The change in gold export and earnings mirrors sweeping reforms, new investment, and buoyant global prices. Annual production is estimated at roughly 37tns most of which is shipped through formal export channels.
However, there is a gap between geological promise and actual production. Most of Ethiopia’s gold comes from artisanal and small-scale miners, who work with little oversight. Infrastructure remains a sticking point, with many mining areas suffering from poor roads, unreliable electricity, and a lack of domestic refining capacity. Smuggling is common, siphoning off potential export earnings, and the lack of modern extraction technology keeps production modest.
These barriers have kept the sector from delivering its full economic potential. But the latest spike in gold prices could change the math. Higher prices improve the financial feasibility of investing in mechanised mining, new exploration, and local processing, moves that could bring deeper and long-term changes to the sector.
Under the new price regime, even a modest improvement in production could have an outsized impact on the national balance sheet. A hypothetical eight to 10pc increase in gold output, achievable through mechanisation and formalising informal miners, would boost export volumes and bring in more foreign exchange. At a price of 3,500 dollars an ounce, net gold revenues after production costs could approach 3.2 billion dollars.
At 4,000 dollars an ounce, that figure would climb to about 3.6 billion dollars, while a further jump to 4,500 dollars an ounce would push net revenue to four billion dollars. These numbers can illustrate how higher prices, even with small increases in production, could dramatically expand Ethiopia’s fiscal space and its strategic options. The fiscal implications are as important as the economic ones. More gold exports mean more foreign currency, which can be used to strengthen forex reserves, stabilise the Birr, and manage its external payments at a time when import bills are high.
But gold is not without its risks. The metal’s price can swing sharply with little warning, depending on shifts in global liquidity, investor sentiment, or trade policy. Leaning too heavily on gold as a fiscal or currency buffer could leave the country exposed if prices fall. The safer course is to channel today’s windfall into longer-term investments, such as better infrastructure, formalising the small-scale mining sector, expanding refining capacity, and building up financial buffers.
Using the current revenue jump to fund recurring government spending could create problems if the market turns.
Beyond the immediate economic and fiscal impact, the rise in gold prices also has diplomatic consequences. With its earnings from gold climbing, Ethiopia is to gain leverage in regional trade talks and investment negotiations. It could position itself as a reliable supplier at a time when global supply chains are seeking more diverse and resilient sources of supply. That, in turn, could attract responsible investors and support trade partnerships, potentially strengthening its role in the Horn of Africa.
But expanding gold mining, especially at the artisanal level, brings its own set of challenges. Environmental concerns, including land degradation and water contamination, as well as potential local disputes over resources, could easily offset the long-term benefits if not managed carefully.
The current opportunity should be about more than selling gold at high prices. The global market presents an opportunity to harness mineral wealth through smart policies, targeted investments, and stricter oversight. Investing in modern mining methods, formalising small-scale operations, developing downstream processing, and improving export logistics could turn a short-term boom into lasting growth. However, policymakers will need to strike a balance between these ambitions and safeguards for social and environmental sustainability, as well as fiscal discipline.
Gold should not be viewed as a mere commodity for Ethiopia. At this critical juncture, it represents an intersection of geology, economics, and geopolitics. The way the country responds to the current price surge could determine whether gold becomes a catalyst for genuine transformation or another missed opportunity. The decisions made now will shape the sector, and, in many ways, the broader economy, for years to come.
PUBLISHED ON
Nov 08,2025 [ VOL
26 , NO
1332]
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