Monday, November 8, 2021

LESSONS FROM THE ETHIOPIA TRAGEDY

This week marked one year since the Ethiopian civil war begun.

What begun as a political dispute when current prime minster Abiy Ahmed rose to power and sidelined the once dominant Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) flared into a full blown civil war and now the imminent fall of Addis Ababa.

This is a tragedy on many fronts not least of all because these developments will set the continent’s second most populous nation back politically and economically.

The signs however have been staring us in the face. While rapid economic growth over the last twenty or so years – the size of their economy was doubling every eight years,  made it look like Ethiopia was on an irreversible path to development you cannot paper over the realities of poverty and inequitable development...

It is not news that Ethiopia has not been the best place for journalists to work in recent years and what triggered the recent uprising is the government’s alleged blockading of Tigray, preventing much needed relief aid from reaching the northern region which is being ravaged by drought.

The details are, of course much messier, but one can guess that Ethiopia’s politics, which is organised along tribal lines is at the heart of it.

And therein lies the challenge of running a developing country, at least in our part of the world.

The reality of power is such that you have to cobble together a power base to propel yourself to power and once there to maintain you there.

When a leader in our parts look around the easiest coalitions are family and tribe, not labour, landowners or industrialists as happens in more developed economies.

All the textbooks will tell you that the narrowness of such powerbases are a recipe for intolerance and instability and are not the best base from which to launch a democratic nation.

And for the while that it works everybody thinks “this time it will be different”, but you cannot subvert the laws of society for long before they turn around to bite you.

As Bill Clinton said when he run for the White House in 1992 “It’s the economy, stupid!”

Any leader worth his name in the world and more importantly in our neck of the woods, has to have the economy at the top of his agenda.

He has to make it his ambition to create the class structures that supersede the politics of tribe and ethnicity. They do this by creating the environment for economic growth, making it easy for business to thrive – you ensure safety of property rights, lay down business enabling infrastructure and allow the markets to thrive....

The cold war showed us, with the collapse of the communist block, that countries are only as credible as the viability of their private sectors.

The private sector creates the economic activity that can be taxed. With these taxes government can provide public goods and most especially education and health services. Education and health are critical because they are the rungs on the ladder required to allow for social climbing of even the lowest members of society. They improve the quality of your human resource.

Education, for one is a great equaliser, allowing students to criss cross the country, interact with other tribes and demystify all the myths surrounding our differences. It also allows them to transcend their ethnicity and causes collaborations that eventually lead to the creation of classes with wide cutting interests.

There are two reasons why leaders do not pursue this progressive course; it takes a long time for these transformations to take root and in the meanwhile they revert to their politics of ethnicity to hang on to power.  But also because it will very well mean working yourself out of a job as the people become more empowered and clamour for the share of power. It is inevitable.

But also, for the simple reason that political expediency does not allow for the selling of long term dreams that you will not be around to see through.

"A better educated, middle class dominated country is unlikely to revert to brute force to resolve political disagreement. They have too much to lose...

Better that than to encourage tribalism and fratricidal war as we are witnessing in Ethiopia, which bursts out and undoes all your good work.


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